Sustainable social distancing through facemask use and testing during the Covid-19 pandemic
Sustainable social distancing through facemask use and testing during the Covid-19 pandemic
We investigate how individual protective behaviors, different levels of testing, and isolation influence the transmission and control of the COVID-19 pandemic. Based on an SEIR-type model incorporating asymptomatic but infectious individuals (40%), we show that the pandemic may be readily controllable through a combination of testing, treatment if necessary, and self-isolation after testing positive (TTI) of symptomatic individuals together with social protection (e.g., facemask use, handwashing). When the basic reproduction number, R0, is 2.4, 65% effective social protection alone (35% of the unprotected transmission) brings the R below 1. Alternatively, 20% effective social protection brings the reproduction number below 1.0 so long as 75% of the symptomatic population is covered by TTI within 12 hours of symptom onset. Even with 20% effective social protection, TTI of 1 in 4 symptomatic individuals can substantially 'flatten the curve' cutting the peak daily incidence in half.
Roosa Kimberlyn、Dhillon Ranu、Srikrishna Devabhaktuni、Chowell Diego、Chowell Gerardo
Department of Population Health Sciences, Georgia State University School of Public HealthDivision of Global Health Equity, Brigham and Women?ˉs Hospital BostonPatient Knowhow, Inc.Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer CenterDepartment of Population Health Sciences, Georgia State University School of Public Health
预防医学医药卫生理论医学研究方法
Roosa Kimberlyn,Dhillon Ranu,Srikrishna Devabhaktuni,Chowell Diego,Chowell Gerardo.Sustainable social distancing through facemask use and testing during the Covid-19 pandemic[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-06-22].https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.04.01.20049981.点此复制
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