Author:
Oh Juhwan,Lee Hwa-Young,Khuong Quynh Long,Markuns Jeffrey F.,Bullen Chris,Barrios Osvaldo Enrique Artaza,Hwang Seung-sik,Suh Young Sahng,McCool Judith,Kachur S. Patrick,Chan Chang-Chuan,Kwon Soonman,Kondo Naoki,Hoang Van Minh,Moon J. Robin,Rostila Mikael,Norheim Ole F.,You Myoungsoon,Withers Mellissa,Li Mu,Lee Eun-Jeung,Benski Caroline,Park Sookyung,Nam Eun-Woo,Gottschalk Katie,Kavanagh Matthew M.,Tran Thi Giang Huong,Lee Jong-Koo,Subramanian S. V.,McKee Martin,Gostin Lawrence O.
Abstract
AbstractMost countries have implemented restrictions on mobility to prevent the spread of Coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19), entailing considerable societal costs but, at least initially, based on limited evidence of effectiveness. We asked whether mobility restrictions were associated with changes in the occurrence of COVID-19 in 34 OECD countries plus Singapore and Taiwan. Our data sources were the Google Global Mobility Data Source, which reports different types of mobility, and COVID-19 cases retrieved from the dataset curated by Our World in Data. Beginning at each country’s 100th case, and incorporating a 14-day lag to account for the delay between exposure and illness, we examined the association between changes in mobility (with January 3 to February 6, 2020 as baseline) and the ratio of the number of newly confirmed cases on a given day to the total number of cases over the past 14 days from the index day (the potentially infective ‘pool’ in that population), per million population, using LOESS regression and logit regression. In two-thirds of examined countries, reductions of up to 40% in commuting mobility (to workplaces, transit stations, retailers, and recreation) were associated with decreased cases, especially early in the pandemic. Once both mobility and incidence had been brought down, further restrictions provided little additional benefit. These findings point to the importance of acting early and decisively in a pandemic.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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