Abstract

Abstract Objectives The excessive spread of the pandemic COVID-19 around the globe has put mankind at risk. The medical infrastructure and resources are frazzled, even for the world's top economies, due to the large COVID-19 infection. To cope up with this situation, countries are exploring the pool test strategies. In this paper, a detailed analysis has been done to explore the efficient pooling strategies. Given a population and the known fact that the percentage of people infected by the virus, the minimum number of tests to identify COVID-19 positive cases from the entire population are found. In this paper, the problem is formulated with an objective to find a minimum number of tests in the worst case where exactly one positive sample is there in a pool which can happen considering the fact that the groups are formed by choosing samples randomly. Therefore, the thrust stress is on minimizing the total number of tests by finding varying pool sizes at different levels (not necessarily same size at all levels), although levels can also be controlled. Methods Initially the problem is formulated as an optimization problem and there is no constraint on the number of levels upto which pooling can be done. Finding an analytical solution of the problem was challenging and thus the approximate solution was obtained and analyzed. Further, it is observed that many times it is pertinent to put a constraint on the number of levels upto which pooling can be done and thus optimizing with such a constraint is also done using genetic algorithm. Results An empirical evaluation on both realistic and synthetic examples is done to show the efficiency of the procedures and for lower values of percentage infection, the total number of tests are very much less than the population size. Further, the findings of this study show that the general COVID-19 pool test gives the better solution for a small infection while as the value of infection becomes significant the single COVID-19 pool test gives better results. Conclusions This paper illustrates the formation and analysis of polling strategies, which can be opted for the better utilization of the resources. Two different pooling strategies are proposed and these strategies yield accurate insight considering the worst case scenario. The analysis finds that the proposed bounds can be efficiently exploited to ascertain the pool testing in view of the COVID-19 infection rate.

Highlights

  • In the history, the mankind has observed numerous infectious diseases, which affect the lives of many people and instigate crisis interventions that are vanquished in extended period of time

  • A new outbreak of novel coronavirus has been identified in the Wuhan City of Hubei Province in South China, which is termed as Severe Acute Respiratory Syndromes (SARS)-CoV-2 or COVID-19

  • The general pool test problem can be formulated mathematically as: Statement: Let n be the size of the population, P be the percentage of COVID19 infected individuals in the population

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Summary

Introduction

The mankind has observed numerous infectious diseases, which affect the lives of many people and instigate crisis interventions that are vanquished in extended period of time. The analysis reveals that the tests needed are very less when compared to the total population This can be looked as an essential step towards efficient utilization of sparse available resources of COVID19 testing kits, especially for the countries having limited medical infrastructure. It has been found that the proposed solution is efficiently finding the optimal pool size and further revealing that the total test administered is fairly less when compared to the administering test of every individual in the population. This can be seen as a positive sign in this critical phase and provides an exigent way to utilize available medical resources systematically.

Single COVID19 pool test problem
General COVID19 pool test problem
Mathematical formation of Single COVID19 Pool Test and its solution
Mathematical formation of General COVID19 Pool Test and its solution
Results and Discussion
Conclusion
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