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Effect of different resumption strategies to flatten the potential COVID-19 outbreaks amid society reopens: a modeling study in China

Effect of different resumption strategies to flatten the potential COVID-19 outbreaks amid society reopens: a modeling study in China
Effect of different resumption strategies to flatten the potential COVID-19 outbreaks amid society reopens: a modeling study in China
Background: the effect of the COVID-19 outbreak has led policymakers around the world to attempt transmission control. However, lockdown and shutdown interventions have caused new social problems and designating policy resumption for infection control when reopening society remains a crucial issue. We investigated the effects of different resumption strategies on COVID-19 transmission using a modeling study setting.

Methods: we employed a susceptible-exposed-infectious-removed model to simulate COVID-19 outbreaks under five reopening strategies based on China’s business resumption progress. The effect of each strategy was evaluated using the peak values of the epidemic curves vis-à-vis confirmed active cases and cumulative cases. Two-sample t-test was performed in order to affirm that the pick values in different scenarios are different.

Results: we found that a hierarchy-based reopen strategy performed best when current epidemic prevention measures were maintained save for lockdown, reducing the peak number of active cases and cumulative cases by 50 and 44%, respectively. However, the modeled effect of each strategy decreased when the current intervention was lifted somewhat. Additional attention should be given to regions with significant numbers of migrants, as the potential risk of COVID-19 outbreaks amid society reopening is intrinsically high.

Conclusions: business resumption strategies have the potential to eliminate COVID-19 outbreaks amid society reopening without special control measures. The proposed resumption strategies focused mainly on decreasing the number of imported exposure cases, guaranteeing medical support for epidemic control, or decreasing active cases.
1471-2458
Ge, Yong
f22fa40c-9a6a-456c-bdad-b322c3fd24ee
Zhang, Wen-Bin
a4ab325c-e9cb-4369-959b-25a3320bb4e3
Wang, Jianghao
824eda0f-b65e-41c4-bb75-b0b604f96454
Liu, Mengxiao
71362048-644e-4deb-a2c0-dfb09382eb32
Ren, Zhoupeng
6a7276d2-8e4d-4189-9e84-59168c1ee7b4
Zhang, Xining
d729ce2a-fc5c-4675-8239-24a9cd6e1627
Zhou, Chenghu
6375a562-379c-435d-8ea2-e6230997fe4b
Tian, Zhaoxing
8a735ca9-3116-4388-bd9d-252cc681a073
Ge, Yong
f22fa40c-9a6a-456c-bdad-b322c3fd24ee
Zhang, Wen-Bin
a4ab325c-e9cb-4369-959b-25a3320bb4e3
Wang, Jianghao
824eda0f-b65e-41c4-bb75-b0b604f96454
Liu, Mengxiao
71362048-644e-4deb-a2c0-dfb09382eb32
Ren, Zhoupeng
6a7276d2-8e4d-4189-9e84-59168c1ee7b4
Zhang, Xining
d729ce2a-fc5c-4675-8239-24a9cd6e1627
Zhou, Chenghu
6375a562-379c-435d-8ea2-e6230997fe4b
Tian, Zhaoxing
8a735ca9-3116-4388-bd9d-252cc681a073

Ge, Yong, Zhang, Wen-Bin, Wang, Jianghao, Liu, Mengxiao, Ren, Zhoupeng, Zhang, Xining, Zhou, Chenghu and Tian, Zhaoxing (2021) Effect of different resumption strategies to flatten the potential COVID-19 outbreaks amid society reopens: a modeling study in China. BMC Public Health, 21, [604]. (doi:10.1186/s12889-021-10624-z).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: the effect of the COVID-19 outbreak has led policymakers around the world to attempt transmission control. However, lockdown and shutdown interventions have caused new social problems and designating policy resumption for infection control when reopening society remains a crucial issue. We investigated the effects of different resumption strategies on COVID-19 transmission using a modeling study setting.

Methods: we employed a susceptible-exposed-infectious-removed model to simulate COVID-19 outbreaks under five reopening strategies based on China’s business resumption progress. The effect of each strategy was evaluated using the peak values of the epidemic curves vis-à-vis confirmed active cases and cumulative cases. Two-sample t-test was performed in order to affirm that the pick values in different scenarios are different.

Results: we found that a hierarchy-based reopen strategy performed best when current epidemic prevention measures were maintained save for lockdown, reducing the peak number of active cases and cumulative cases by 50 and 44%, respectively. However, the modeled effect of each strategy decreased when the current intervention was lifted somewhat. Additional attention should be given to regions with significant numbers of migrants, as the potential risk of COVID-19 outbreaks amid society reopening is intrinsically high.

Conclusions: business resumption strategies have the potential to eliminate COVID-19 outbreaks amid society reopening without special control measures. The proposed resumption strategies focused mainly on decreasing the number of imported exposure cases, guaranteeing medical support for epidemic control, or decreasing active cases.

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Accepted/In Press date: 14 March 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 29 March 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 490627
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/490627
ISSN: 1471-2458
PURE UUID: aa51410d-736d-4e68-a9e2-7dca378629a4
ORCID for Wen-Bin Zhang: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9295-1019

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Date deposited: 31 May 2024 16:46
Last modified: 01 Jun 2024 02:07

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Contributors

Author: Yong Ge
Author: Wen-Bin Zhang ORCID iD
Author: Jianghao Wang
Author: Mengxiao Liu
Author: Zhoupeng Ren
Author: Xining Zhang
Author: Chenghu Zhou
Author: Zhaoxing Tian

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