Abstract

In this work, a SEIR-type mathematical model of the COVID-19 outbreak was developed that describes individuals in compartments by infection stage and age group. The model assumes a close well-mixed community with no migrations. Infection rates and clinical and epidemiological information govern the transitions between stages of the disease. The impact of specific interventions (including the availability of critical care) on the outbreak time course, the number of cases and the outcome of fatalities were evaluated. Data available from the COVID-19 outbreak from Spain as of mid-May 2020 was used. Key findings in our model simulation results indicate that (i) universal social isolation measures appear effective in reducing total fatalities only if they are strict and the number of daily interpersonal contacts is reduced to very low numbers; (ii) selective isolation of only the elderly (at higher fatality risk) appears almost as effective as universal isolation in reducing total fatalities but at a possible lower economic and social impact; (iii) an increase in the number of critical care capacity directly avoids fatalities; (iv) the use of personal protective equipment (PPE) appears to be effective to dramatically reduce total fatalities when adopted extensively and to a high degree; (v) extensive random testing of the population for more complete infection recognition (accompanied by subsequent self-isolation of infected aware individuals) can dramatically reduce the total fatalities only above a high percentage threshold that may not be practically feasible.

Highlights

  • COVID-19 is the worst pandemic the world has seen in a century

  • The model provides a direct estimation of the effective reproduction number(Rt) [27, 28] under different circumstances of individual characteristics as well as under population-based interventions

  • The results show that extensive testing as a sole strategy appears as unfeasible to decrease the number of fatalities due to the high percentage of detections, sustained over time, required

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Summary

Introduction

COVID-19 is the worst pandemic the world has seen in a century. The devastating consequences of the pandemic, both in number of fatalities as in economic harm, have brought unprecedented attention from most fields. The large number of cases in a short period of time have forced governments to implement interventions to slow the spread of the virus. The model are available at https://github.com/ EnvBioProM/COVID_Model

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