학술논문

Risk scorecard to minimise impact of COVID-19 when re-opening.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
Journal of Travel Medicine. Oct2021, Vol. 28 Issue 7, p1-9. 9p.
Subject
*COVID-19
*CONTACT tracing
*SOCIAL distancing
*STAY-at-home orders
Language
ISSN
1195-1982
Abstract
Background: We present a novel approach for exiting COVID-19 lockdowns using a 'risk scorecard' to prioritise activities to resume whilst allowing safe re-opening.Methods: We modelled cases generated in the community/week, incorporating parameters for social distancing, contact tracing and imported cases. We set thresholds for cases and analysed the effect of varying parameters. An online tool to facilitate country-specific use including the modification of parameters (https://sshsphdemos.shinyapps.io/covid_riskbudget/) enables visualisation of effects of parameter changes and trade-offs. Local outbreak investigation data from Singapore illustrates this.Results: Setting a threshold of 0.9 mean number of secondary cases arising from a case to keep R < 1, we showed that opening all activities excluding high-risk ones (e.g. nightclubs) allows cases to remain within threshold; while opening high-risk activities would exceed the threshold and result in escalating cases. An 80% reduction in imported cases per week (141 to 29) reduced steady-state cases by 30% (295 to 205). One-off surges in cases (due to superspreading) had no effect on the steady state if the R remains < 1. Increasing the effectiveness of contact tracing (probability of a community case being isolated when infectious) by 33% (0.6 to 0.8) reduced cases by 22% (295 to 231). Cases grew exponentially if the product of the mean number of secondary cases arising from a case and (1-probability of case being isolated) was > 1.Conclusions: Countries can utilise a 'risk scorecard' to balance relaxations for travel and domestic activity depending on factors that reduce disease impact, including hospital/ICU capacity, contact tracing, quarantine and vaccination. The tool enabled visualization of the combinations of imported cases and activity levels on the case numbers and the trade-offs required. For vaccination, a reduction factor should be applied both for likelihood of an infected case being present and a close contact getting infected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]