Author: Cheng, Changxiu; Zhang, Tianyuan; Song, Changqing; Shen, Shi; Jiang, Yifan; Zhang, Xiangxue
                    Title: The Coupled Impact of Emergency Responses and Population Flows on the COVIDâ€19 Pandemic in China  Cord-id: 915robxq  Document date: 2020_12_14
                    ID: 915robxq
                    
                    Snippet: Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19) has spread around the world and requires effective control measures. Like the humanâ€toâ€human transmission of the severe acute respiratory syndromeâ€coronavirus 2 (SARSâ€CoVâ€2), the distribution of COVIDâ€19 was driven by population flow and required emergency response measures to slow down its spread and degrade the epidemic risk. The local epidemic risk of COVIDâ€19 is a combination of emergency response measures and population flow. Because of th
                    
                    
                    
                     
                    
                    
                    
                    
                        
                            
                                Document: Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19) has spread around the world and requires effective control measures. Like the humanâ€toâ€human transmission of the severe acute respiratory syndromeâ€coronavirus 2 (SARSâ€CoVâ€2), the distribution of COVIDâ€19 was driven by population flow and required emergency response measures to slow down its spread and degrade the epidemic risk. The local epidemic risk of COVIDâ€19 is a combination of emergency response measures and population flow. Because of the spatial heterogeneity, the different impacts of coupled emergency responses and population flow on the COVIDâ€19 epidemic during the outbreak period and a control period are unclear. We examined and compared the impact of emergency response measures and population flow on China's epidemic risk after the Wuhan lockdown during the outbreak period and a control period. We found that the population flow out of Wuhan had a longâ€term impact on the epidemic's spread. In the outbreak period, a large population flow out of Wuhan led to nationwide migration mobility, which directly increased the epidemic in each province. Meanwhile, quick emergency responses mitigated the spread. Although low population flow to provinces far from Hubei delayed the outbreak in those provinces, relatively delayed emergency response increased the epidemic in the control period. Consequently, due to the strong transmission ability of the SARSâ€CoVâ€2 virus, no region correctly estimated the epidemic, and the relaxed emergency response raised the epidemic risks in the context of the outbreak.
 
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