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High variation expected in the pace and burden of SARS-CoV-2 outbreaks across sub-Saharan Africa

High variation expected in the pace and burden of SARS-CoV-2 outbreaks across sub-Saharan Africa
High variation expected in the pace and burden of SARS-CoV-2 outbreaks across sub-Saharan Africa

A surprising feature of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic to date is the low burdens reported in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) countries relative to other global regions. Potential explanations (e.g., warmer environments1, younger populations2-4) have yet to be framed within a comprehensive analysis accounting for factors that may offset the effects of climate and demography. Here, we synthesize factors hypothesized to shape the pace of this pandemic and its burden as it moves across SSA, encompassing demographic, comorbidity, climatic, healthcare and intervention capacity, and human mobility dimensions of risk. We find large scale diversity in probable drivers, such that outcomes are likely to be highly variable among SSA countries. While simulation shows that extensive climatic variation among SSA population centers has little effect on early outbreak trajectories, heterogeneity in connectivity is likely to play a large role in shaping the pace of viral spread. The prolonged, asynchronous outbreaks expected in weakly connected settings may result in extended stress to health systems. In addition, the observed variability in comorbidities and access to care will likely modulate the severity of infection: We show that even small shifts in the infection fatality ratio towards younger ages, which are likely in high risk settings, can eliminate the protective effect of younger populations. We highlight countries with elevated risk of 'slow pace', high burden outbreaks. Empirical data on the spatial extent of outbreaks within SSA countries, their patterns in severity over age, and the relationship between epidemic pace and health system disruptions are urgently needed to guide efforts to mitigate the high burden scenarios explored here.

medRxiv
Rice, Benjamin L
56d9a408-e48c-4394-b136-af9e79e4550a
Annapragada, Akshaya
28297bde-a0ec-4695-8e0a-ac94711c6abc
Baker, Rachel E
b1110274-8d5b-4a54-be7e-c5aea37410bd
Bruijning, Marjolein
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Dotse-Gborgbortsi, Winfred
8e7a4177-1620-4a2b-a860-baa1c5e29bb8
Mensah, Keitly
27cae9e8-503c-431c-ab87-bef9276dbe64
Miller, Ian F
9f6d9110-9d66-404a-8b21-3b96630ca266
Motaze, Nkengafac Villyen
2ba9456c-4034-4783-b85d-1e48feb5f1b4
Raherinandrasana, Antso
d0bf825c-f9d0-4f80-ab25-1df1353df405
Rajeev, Malavika
14d1327b-97e2-4878-bb79-a52701dd5afc
Rakotonirina, Julio
197a9f22-4d88-4b07-b6b3-1b432a7f947e
Ramiadantsoa, Tanjona
94c62834-46f6-4a7e-a321-4c510ee6b998
Rasambainarivo, Fidisoa
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Yu, Weiyu
f2cfd69d-3095-401b-ac3b-4882de4e1bb0
Grenfell, Bryan T
f80f3700-0b24-4932-80bf-d5ac2201882e
Tatem, Andrew J
6c6de104-a5f9-46e0-bb93-a1a7c980513e
Metcalf, C Jessica E
ce1431b5-f784-4552-b66c-52fcb08f095c
Rice, Benjamin L
56d9a408-e48c-4394-b136-af9e79e4550a
Annapragada, Akshaya
28297bde-a0ec-4695-8e0a-ac94711c6abc
Baker, Rachel E
b1110274-8d5b-4a54-be7e-c5aea37410bd
Bruijning, Marjolein
22a7d740-2f01-414a-ab4e-b16ed5ef4ef5
Dotse-Gborgbortsi, Winfred
8e7a4177-1620-4a2b-a860-baa1c5e29bb8
Mensah, Keitly
27cae9e8-503c-431c-ab87-bef9276dbe64
Miller, Ian F
9f6d9110-9d66-404a-8b21-3b96630ca266
Motaze, Nkengafac Villyen
2ba9456c-4034-4783-b85d-1e48feb5f1b4
Raherinandrasana, Antso
d0bf825c-f9d0-4f80-ab25-1df1353df405
Rajeev, Malavika
14d1327b-97e2-4878-bb79-a52701dd5afc
Rakotonirina, Julio
197a9f22-4d88-4b07-b6b3-1b432a7f947e
Ramiadantsoa, Tanjona
94c62834-46f6-4a7e-a321-4c510ee6b998
Rasambainarivo, Fidisoa
eec49e34-9285-43b7-b9b0-5522c2789268
Yu, Weiyu
f2cfd69d-3095-401b-ac3b-4882de4e1bb0
Grenfell, Bryan T
f80f3700-0b24-4932-80bf-d5ac2201882e
Tatem, Andrew J
6c6de104-a5f9-46e0-bb93-a1a7c980513e
Metcalf, C Jessica E
ce1431b5-f784-4552-b66c-52fcb08f095c

[Unknown type: UNSPECIFIED]

Record type: UNSPECIFIED

Abstract

A surprising feature of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic to date is the low burdens reported in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) countries relative to other global regions. Potential explanations (e.g., warmer environments1, younger populations2-4) have yet to be framed within a comprehensive analysis accounting for factors that may offset the effects of climate and demography. Here, we synthesize factors hypothesized to shape the pace of this pandemic and its burden as it moves across SSA, encompassing demographic, comorbidity, climatic, healthcare and intervention capacity, and human mobility dimensions of risk. We find large scale diversity in probable drivers, such that outcomes are likely to be highly variable among SSA countries. While simulation shows that extensive climatic variation among SSA population centers has little effect on early outbreak trajectories, heterogeneity in connectivity is likely to play a large role in shaping the pace of viral spread. The prolonged, asynchronous outbreaks expected in weakly connected settings may result in extended stress to health systems. In addition, the observed variability in comorbidities and access to care will likely modulate the severity of infection: We show that even small shifts in the infection fatality ratio towards younger ages, which are likely in high risk settings, can eliminate the protective effect of younger populations. We highlight countries with elevated risk of 'slow pace', high burden outbreaks. Empirical data on the spatial extent of outbreaks within SSA countries, their patterns in severity over age, and the relationship between epidemic pace and health system disruptions are urgently needed to guide efforts to mitigate the high burden scenarios explored here.

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Published date: 29 July 2020

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 457941
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/457941
PURE UUID: dac57739-e0d5-4d41-99ee-c24f12f04707
ORCID for Andrew J Tatem: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7270-941X

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Date deposited: 23 Jun 2022 16:53
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:29

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Contributors

Author: Benjamin L Rice
Author: Akshaya Annapragada
Author: Rachel E Baker
Author: Marjolein Bruijning
Author: Winfred Dotse-Gborgbortsi
Author: Keitly Mensah
Author: Ian F Miller
Author: Nkengafac Villyen Motaze
Author: Antso Raherinandrasana
Author: Malavika Rajeev
Author: Julio Rakotonirina
Author: Tanjona Ramiadantsoa
Author: Fidisoa Rasambainarivo
Author: Weiyu Yu
Author: Bryan T Grenfell
Author: Andrew J Tatem ORCID iD
Author: C Jessica E Metcalf

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