Abstract
The novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) broke out worldwide in 2020. The purpose of this paper was to find out the impact of migrant population on the epidemic, aiming to provide data support and suggestions for control measures in various epidemic areas. Generalized additive model was utilized to model the relationship between migrant population and the cumulative number of confirmed cases of COVID-19. The difference of spatial distribution was analyzed through spatial autocorrelation and hot spot analysis. Generalized additive model demonstrated that the cumulative number of confirmed cases was positively correlated with migration index and population density. The predictive results showed that, if no travel restrictions are imposed on the migrant population as usual, this number of COVID-19 would have reached 27,483 (95% CI 16,074, 48,097; the actual number was 23,177). The increase in one city (Jian) would be 577.23% (95% CI 322.73%, 972.73%) compared with the real confirmed cases of COVID-19. The average increase in 73 cities was 85.53% (95% CI 19.53%, 189.81%). Among the migration destinations, the number of cases in cities of Hubei province, Chongqing, and Beijing was relatively high, and there were large-scale high-prevalence clusters in eastern Hubei province. Without restrictions on migration, the high prevalence areas in Hubei province and its surrounding areas will be further expanded. The reduced population mobility and population density can greatly slow down the spread of the epidemic. All epidemic areas should suspend the transportation between cities, strictly control the population travel, and decrease the population density, so as to reduce the spread of COVID-19.Supplementary InformationThe online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s11356-021-13195-z.
Highlights
In 2020, a novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) epidemic broke out in the world
The migration index (MI) reflects the scale of migrant population from one city to another (i.e., MI of city B indicates the scale of migrants from epidemic area A to city B), and all cities have migration indexes corresponding to one specific city
Spatial autocorrelation and hot spot analysis methods were applied to analyze the regional differences of confirmed cases
Summary
In 2020, a novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) epidemic broke out in the world. This is a lung disease caused by novel coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2). Its incubation is 1–14 days (possibly longer, up to 24 days (Guan et al 2020)), with an average of 3–7 days. Respiratory droplets and close contact transmission are the main transmission routes (fecal-oral transmission exists (Wu et al 2020c)). The majority symptoms are dry cough, fever, and fatigue (foundation et al 2020; House and Association 2020). The fatality rate is slightly lower than that of SARS in 2003
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