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Modelling the impact of relaxing COVID-19 control measures during a period of low viral transmission

Authors :
Samuel W. Hainsworth
Rachel Sacks-Davis
Dina Mistry
Margaret Hellard
Mark Stoove
David Wilson
Robyn M. Stuart
Nick Scott
Romesh G. Abeysuriya
Daniel J. Klein
Katie Heath
Anna Palmer
Cliff C. Kerr
Alisa Pedrana
Dominic Delport
Source :
Scott, N, Palmer, A, Delport, D, Abeysuriya, R, Stuart, R M, Kerr, C C, Mistry, D, Klein, D J, Sacks-davis, R, Heath, K, Hainsworth, S W, Pedrana, A, Stoove, M, Wilson, D & Hellard, M E 2021, ' Modelling the impact of relaxing COVID-19 control measures during a period of low viral transmission ', Medical Journal of Australia, vol. 214, no. 2, pp. 79-83 . https://doi.org/10.5694/mja2.50845
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

ObjectivesTo assess the risks associated with relaxing coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)-related physical distancing restrictions and lockdown policies during a period of low viral transmission.DesignNetwork-based viral transmission risks in households, schools, workplaces, and a variety of community spaces and activities were simulated in an agent-based model, Covasim.SettingThe model was calibrated for a baseline scenario reflecting the epidemiological and policy environment in Victoria during March–May 2020, a period of low community viral transmission.InterventionPolicy changes for easing COVID-19-related restrictions from May 2020 were simulated in the context of interventions that included testing, contact tracing (including with a smartphone app), and quarantine.Main outcome measureIncrease in detected COVID-19 cases following relaxation of restrictions.ResultsPolicy changes that facilitate contact of individuals with large numbers of unknown people (eg, opening bars, increased public transport use) were associated with the greatest risk of COVID-19 case numbers increasing; changes leading to smaller, structured gatherings with known contacts (eg, small social gatherings, opening schools) were associated with lower risks. In our model, the rise in case numbers following some policy changes was notable only two months after their implementation.ConclusionsRemoving several COVID-19-related restrictions within a short period of time should be undertaken with care, as the consequences may not be apparent for more than two months. Our findings support continuation of work from home policies (to reduce public transport use) and strategies that mitigate the risk associated with re-opening of social venues.

Details

ISSN :
13265377
Volume :
214
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Medical journal of Australia
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9fcbc25cf898b4ed23cbe01582024b4c