Abstract

Beginning in March 2020, the United States emerged as the global epicenter for COVID-19 cases with little to guide policy response in the absence of extensive data available for reliable epidemiological modeling in the early phases of the pandemic. In the ensuing weeks, American jurisdictions attempted to manage disease spread on a regional basis using non-pharmaceutical interventions (i.e., social distancing), as uneven disease burden across the expansive geography of the United States exerted different implications for policy management in different regions. While Arizona policymakers relied initially on state-by-state national modeling projections from different groups outside of the state, we sought to create a state-specific model using a mathematical framework that ties disease surveillance with the future burden on Arizona's healthcare system. Our framework uses a compartmental system dynamics model using a SEIRD framework that accounts for multiple types of disease manifestations for the COVID-19 infection, as well as the observed time delay in epidemiological findings following public policy enactments. We use a compartment initialization logic coupled with a fitting technique to construct projections for key metrics to guide public health policy, including exposures, infections, hospitalizations, and deaths under a variety of social reopening scenarios. Our approach makes use of X-factor fitting and backcasting methods to construct meaningful and reliable models with minimal available data in order to provide timely policy guidance in the early phases of a pandemic.

Highlights

  • Since its documented onset in December 2019 and formal identification in January 2020 in Wuhan, China, COVID-19 (SARS-CoV-2) has spread around the globe, infecting more than 7.5 million people globally by mid June 2020 [1]

  • In this paper we have proposed a methodology for modelling and projecting the spread of the COVID-19 epidemic in Arizona by considering publicly available data from March 4 to June 7

  • This work is focused on using mathematical modeling techniques to understand the localized features of infection and disease transmission in the early phases of an epidemic, in the absence of extensive available data, as well as exploring the impacts of possible scenarios for implementing control measures through public policy

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Summary

Introduction

Since its documented onset in December 2019 and formal identification in January 2020 in Wuhan, China, COVID-19 (SARS-CoV-2) has spread around the globe, infecting more than 7.5 million people globally by mid June 2020 [1]. COVID-19 healthcare demand projections infectious-disease-epidemiology/covid-19/ dashboards/index.php All additional relevant data are within the manuscript with citations to external sources

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