Abstract

The application, timing, and duration of lockdown strategies during a pandemic remain poorly quantified with regards to expected public health outcomes. Previous projection models have reached conflicting conclusions about the effect of complete lockdowns on COVID-19 outcomes. We developed a stochastic continuous-time Markov chain (CTMC) model with eight states including the environment (SEAMHQRD-V), and derived a formula for the basic reproduction number, R0, for that model. Applying the {R}_{0} formula as a function in previously-published social contact matrices from 152 countries, we produced the distribution and four categories of possible {R}_{0} for the 152 countries and chose one country from each quarter as a representative for four social contact categories (Canada, China, Mexico, and Niger). The model was then used to predict the effects of lockdown timing in those four categories through the representative countries. The analysis for the effect of a lockdown was performed without the influence of the other control measures, like social distancing and mask wearing, to quantify its absolute effect. Hypothetical lockdown timing was shown to be the critical parameter in ameliorating pandemic peak incidence. More importantly, we found that well-timed lockdowns can split the peak of hospitalizations into two smaller distant peaks while extending the overall pandemic duration. The timing of lockdowns reveals that a “tunneling” effect on incidence can be achieved to bypass the peak and prevent pandemic caseloads from exceeding hospital capacity.

Highlights

  • The application, timing, and duration of lockdown strategies during a pandemic remain poorly quantified with regards to expected public health outcomes

  • To date most of the work done to model COVID-19 has used deterministic modelling which gives an approximation of the mean of the stochastic epidemic c­ urves[29, 38,39,40]

  • The outputs of our carefully crafted simulations of the continuous-time Markov chain (CTMC) model demonstrate that the timing of the lockdown relative to the epidemic peak is a key factor in controlling COVID-19 and prevent hospital systems from becoming overwhelmed

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The application, timing, and duration of lockdown strategies during a pandemic remain poorly quantified with regards to expected public health outcomes. Shorter lockdowns seem to be of larger relative effect on the total attack rate if they start close enough to the peak of the actual incidence.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call