The impact of policy timing on the spread of COVID-19.

COVID-19 Exponential growth Growth hindering Pandemic

Journal

Infectious Disease Modelling
ISSN: 2468-0427
Titre abrégé: Infect Dis Model
Pays: China
ID NLM: 101692406

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
2021
Historique:
received: 23 03 2021
revised: 29 06 2021
accepted: 28 07 2021
entrez: 9 8 2021
pubmed: 10 8 2021
medline: 10 8 2021
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

We model COVID-19 data for 89 nations and US states with a recently developed formalism that describes mathematically any pattern of growth with the minimum number of parameters. The results show that the disease has a typical duration of 18 days, with a significant increase in fatality when it lasts longer than about 4 months. Searching for correlations between "flattening of the curve" and preventive public policies, we find strong statistical evidence for the impact of the first implemented policy on decreasing the pandemic growth rate; a delay of one week in implementation nearly triples the size of the infected population, on average. Without any government action, the initial outburst still slows down after 36 days, possibly thanks to changes in public behavior in response to the pandemic toll. Stay-at-home (lockdown) was not the first policy of any sample member, and we could not find statistically meaningful evidence for its added impact, similar to a recent study that employed an entirely different approach. However, lockdown was mostly imposed only shortly before the exponential rise was arrested by other measures, too late for a meaningful impact. A third of the sample members that did implement lockdown imposed it only after the outburst had already started to slow down. The possibility remains that lockdown might have significantly shortened the initial exponential rise had it been employed as first resort rather than last.

Identifiants

pubmed: 34368516
doi: 10.1016/j.idm.2021.07.005
pii: S2468-0427(21)00052-X
pmc: PMC8324487
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

942-954

Informations de copyright

© 2021 The Authors.

Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts

No conflicts of interest for any of the authors.

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Auteurs

Moshe Elitzur (M)

Department of Astronomy, Univ of California, Berkeley, CA, 94720, USA.

Scott Kaplan (S)

Dept of Agricultural & Resource Economics, Univ of California, Berkeley, CA, 94720, USA.
Dept of Economics, United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, MD 21402, USA.

Željko Ivezić (Ž)

Dept of Astronomy, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, 98195, USA.

David Zilberman (D)

Dept of Agricultural & Resource Economics, Univ of California, Berkeley, CA, 94720, USA.

Classifications MeSH