Spatiotemporal spread pattern of the COVID-19 cases in China

Author:

Feng YongjiuORCID,Li Qingmei,Tong Xiaohua,Wang Rong,Zhai Shuting,Gao Chen,Lei Zhenkun,Chen Shurui,Zhou Yilun,Wang Jiafeng,Yan Xiongfeng,Xie Huan,Chen Peng,Liu Shijie,Xv Xiong,Liu Sicong,Jin Yanmin,Wang Chao,Hong Zhonghua,Luan Kuifeng,Wei Chao,Xu Jinfu,Jiang Hua,Xiao Changjiang,Guo Yiyou

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic is currently spreading widely around the world, causing huge threats to public safety and global society. This study analyzes the spatiotemporal pattern of the COVID-19 pandemic in China, reveals China’s epicenters of the pandemic through spatial clustering, and delineates the substantial effect of distance to Wuhan on the pandemic spread. The results show that the daily new COVID-19 cases mostly occurred in and around Wuhan before March 6, and then moved to the Grand Bay Area (Shenzhen, Hong Kong and Macau). The total COVID-19 cases in China were mainly distributed in the east of the Huhuanyong Line, where the epicenters accounted for more than 60% of the country’s total in/on 24 January and 7 February, half in/on 31 January, and more than 70% from 14 February. The total cases finally stabilized at approximately 84,000, and the inflection point for Wuhan was on 14 February, one week later than those of Hubei (outside Wuhan) and China (outside Hubei). The generalized additive model-based analysis shows that population density and distance to provincial cities were significantly associated with the total number of the cases, while distances to prefecture cities and intercity traffic stations, and population inflow from Wuhan after 24 January, had no strong relationships with the total number of cases. The results and findings should provide valuable insights for understanding the changes in the COVID-19 transmission as well as implications for controlling the global COVID-19 pandemic spread.

Funder

National Major Science and Technology Projects of China

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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