Abstract

This paper stresses its base contribution on a new SIR-type model including direct and fomite transmission as well as the effect of distinct household structures. The model derivation is modulated by several mechanistic processes inherent from typical airborne diseases. The notion of minimum contact radius is included in the direct transmission, facilitating the arguments on physical distancing. As fomite transmission heavily relates to former-trace of sneezes, the vector field of the system naturally contains an integral kernel with time delay indicating the contribution of undetected and non-quarantined asymptomatic cases in accumulating the historical contamination of surfaces. We then increase the complexity by including the different transmission routines within and between households. For airborne diseases, within-household interactions play a significant role in the propagation of the disease rendering countrywide effect. Two steps were taken to include the effect of household structure. The first step subdivides the entire compartments (susceptible, exposed, asymptomatic, symptomatic, recovered, death) into the household level and different infection rates for the direct transmission within and between households were distinguished. Under predefined conditions and assumptions, the governing system on household level can be raised to the community level. The second step then raises the governing system to the country level, where the final state variables estimate the total individuals from all compartments in the country. Two key attributes related to the household structure (number of local households and number of household members) effectively classify countries to be of low or high risk in terms of effective disease propagation. The basic reproductive number is calculated and its biological meaning is invoked properly. The numerical methods for solving the DIDE-system and the parameter estimation problem were mentioned. Our optimal model solutions are in quite good agreement with datasets of COVID-19 active cases and related deaths from Germany and Sri Lanka in early infection, allowing us to hypothesize several unobservable situations in the two countries. Focusing on extending minimum contact radius and reducing the intensity of individual activities, we were able to synthesize the key parameters telling what to practice.

Highlights

  • In December 2019, a number of residents were diagnosed with pneumonia in Wuhan, China alarming a viral outbreak

  • Later in early January 2020, it was identified that the cause of this pneumonia be a novel coronavirus (SARS-Corona Virus (CoV)-2) and the disease is officially named as COVID-19 [1]

  • 7 Conclusion A micro-level approach on individual behavior and household structure in viewing COVID-19 transmission is proposed in this work

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Summary

Introduction

In December 2019, a number of residents were diagnosed with pneumonia in Wuhan, China alarming a viral outbreak. World Health Organization (WHO) declared COVID-19 as a pandemic on March 11, 2020 and has been conveying technical guidance to mitigate the disease burden with over 20 million confirmed cases and over 125,000 fatalities worldwide as of mid April, 2020 [2] Quantification measures such as the basic reproductive number and case fatality rate direct scientists, authorities, and general public toward testing and simulating, bearing interventions and evaluating healthcare capacity, and preventive habits, respectively. Li et al [6] as per their analysis of early dynamics, reported that the basic reproductive number R0 of COVID-19 in China was 2.2 and incubation period 5.2 days. Transmission risk of COVID-19 is noteworthy as compared to previous two outbreaks SARS in 2003 and MERS in 2012 since individuals can be infectious before being symptomatic [1, 8]

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