Non-pharmaceutical intervention levels to reduce the COVID-19 attack ratio among children

Author:

David Jummy12,Bragazzi Nicola Luigi12,Scarabel Francesca345ORCID,McCarthy Zachary12ORCID,Wu Jianhong12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Fields-CQAM Laboratory of Mathematics for Public Health (MfPH), York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

2. Laboratory for Industrial and Applied Mathematics, York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

3. Department of Mathematics, The University of Manchester, Manchester, UK

4. Joint UNIversities Pandemic and Epidemiological Research (JUNIPER), UK

5. CDLab - Computational Dynamics Laboratory, Department of Mathematics, Computer Science and Physics, University of Udine, Italy

Abstract

The attack ratio in a subpopulation is defined as the total number of infections over the total number of individuals in this subpopulation. Using a methodology based on an age-stratified transmission dynamics model, we estimated the attack ratio of COVID-19 among children (individuals 0–11 years) when a large proportion of individuals eligible for vaccination (age 12 and above) are vaccinated to contain the epidemic among this subpopulation, or the effective herd immunity (with additional physical distancing measures). We describe the relationship between the attack ratio among children, the time to remove infected individuals from the transmission chain and the children-to-children daily contact rate while considering the increased transmissibility of virus variants (using the Delta variant as an example). We illustrate the generality and applicability of the methodology established by performing an analysis of the attack ratio of COVID-19 among children in the population of Canada and in its province of Ontario. The clinical attack ratio, defined as the number of symptomatic infections over the total population, can be informed from the attack ratio and both can be reduced substantially via a combination of reduced social mixing and rapid testing and isolation of the children.

Funder

Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) and Public Health Agency of Canada

UKRI

Canadian Institute of Health Research

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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