Author: Hu, Bisong; Ning, Pan; Qiu, Jingyu; Tao, Vincent; Devlin, Adam Thomas; Chen, Haiying; Wang, Jinfeng; Lin, Hui
                    Title: Modeling the complete spatiotemporal spread of the COVID-19 epidemic in mainland China  Cord-id: ymyzgpj7  Document date: 2021_4_20
                    ID: ymyzgpj7
                    
                    Snippet: OBJECTIVES: The outbreak of novel coronavirus (COVID-19) epidemic is reaching its final phase in China. The complete epidemic data are available for a complete assessment of epidemiological parameters in all regions and time periods. METHODS: This study aims to present a spatiotemporal epidemic model based on spatially stratified heterogeneity (SSH) to simulate the epidemic spread. A susceptible-exposed/latent-infected-removed (SEIR) model was constructed for each SSH-identified stratum (each ad
                    
                    
                    
                     
                    
                    
                    
                    
                        
                            
                                Document: OBJECTIVES: The outbreak of novel coronavirus (COVID-19) epidemic is reaching its final phase in China. The complete epidemic data are available for a complete assessment of epidemiological parameters in all regions and time periods. METHODS: This study aims to present a spatiotemporal epidemic model based on spatially stratified heterogeneity (SSH) to simulate the epidemic spread. A susceptible-exposed/latent-infected-removed (SEIR) model was constructed for each SSH-identified stratum (each administrative city) to estimate the spatiotemporal epidemiological parameters of the outbreak. RESULTS: We estimated that the mean latent and removed periods were 5.40 and 2.13 days, respectively. There was an average of 1.72 latent or infected persons per 10,000 Wuhan travelers to elsewhere until January 20(th), 2020. The space-time basic reproduction number (R(0)) estimates indicate an initial value between 2 and 3.5 in most cities on this date. The mean period for R(0) estimates to decrease to 80% and 50% of initial values in cities were an average of 14.73 and 19.62 days, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Our model estimates the complete spatiotemporal epidemiological characteristics of the outbreak in a space-time domain, and the findings will help enhance a comprehensive understanding of the outbreak and inform the strategies of prevention and control in other countries worldwide.
 
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