Abstract

Simple SummaryA modified SIR model was applied to provide COVID-19 pandemic analysis and predictions for Gulf Cooperation Council countries, as well as representative countries in Europe and New York City. We estimated reported, infected, and unreported cases from cumulative reported cases and simulated data. We also estimated the basic reproduction rates at different phases of the pandemic. Outputs show that the modified SIR model fits very well with the outcome of the COVID-19 pandemic for the studied countries and could be generalized to other countries. The model prediction emphasizes the value of significant interventions in public health in regulating the epidemic taking into account that a constant fraction of the infected cases remain unreported during the pandemic. We report and analyze the effectiveness of preventive/intervention measures applied to the overall community to curb the severity of the pandemic. Our model could be used to support public health authorities with respect to post-outbreak reopening decisions, highlighting effective measures that need to be maintained, eased, or implemented to support safe reopening strategies in the GCC countries.Epidemiological Modeling supports the evaluation of various disease management activities. The value of epidemiological models lies in their ability to study various scenarios and to provide governments with a priori knowledge of the consequence of disease incursions and the impact of preventive strategies. A prevalent method of modeling the spread of pandemics is to categorize individuals in the population as belonging to one of several distinct compartments, which represents their health status with regard to the pandemic. In this work, a modified SIR epidemic model is proposed and analyzed with respect to the identification of its parameters and initial values based on stated or recorded case data from public health sources to estimate the unreported cases and the effectiveness of public health policies such as social distancing in slowing the spread of the epidemic. The analysis aims to highlight the importance of unreported cases for correcting the underestimated basic reproduction number. In many epidemic outbreaks, the number of reported infections is likely much lower than the actual number of infections which can be calculated from the model’s parameters derived from reported case data. The analysis is applied to the COVID-19 pandemic for several countries in the Gulf region and Europe.

Highlights

  • The first known COVID-19 case was reported by officials in Wuhan City, China, on31 December 2019

  • Here, we focus on their assessment on the basis of the reported symptomatic-and-infectious cases

  • Using Equation (7) for the basic reproduction number, we obtained from the data an estimation of the basic reproduction number R0 = 2.42 and an average R0 in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), which was 2.20 ± 0.123

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Summary

Introduction

The first known COVID-19 case was reported by officials in Wuhan City, China, on31 December 2019. The first known COVID-19 case was reported by officials in Wuhan City, China, on. The number of confirmed infectious cases was on the rise. On 11 March 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the COVID-19 outbreak to be a pandemic [1]. As of 23 January 2021, the outbreak has had an effect on 7,119,570 people in the Middle East, and 1,181,199 confirmed cases have been reported in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries according to the Worldometers website www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/ A national emergency was declared for the Coronavirus outbreak in Qatar at the beginning of March 2020 [2], and by 23 January 2021, the number of cases reported in

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