Interplay of global multi-scale human mobility, social distancing, government interventions, and COVID-19 dynamics

Author:

Adiga Aniruddha,Wang Lijing,Sadilek Adam,Tendulkar Ashish,Venkatramanan Srinivasan,Vullikanti Anil,Aggarwal Gaurav,Talekar Alok,Ben Xue,Chen Jiangzhuo,Lewis Bryan,Swarup Samarth,Tambe Milind,Marathe Madhav

Abstract

AbstractThis work quantifies mobility changes observed during the different phases of the pandemic world-wide at multiple resolutions – county, state, country – using an anonymized aggregate mobility map that captures population flows between geographic cells of size 5 km2. As we overlay the global mobility map with epidemic incidence curves and dates of government interventions, we observe that as case counts rose, mobility fell and has since then seen a slow but steady increase in flows. Further, in order to understand mixing within a region, we propose a new metric to quantify the effect of social distancing on the basis of mobility.Taking two very different countries sampled from the global spectrum, We analyze in detail the mobility patterns of the United States (US) and India. We then carry out a counterfactual analysis of delaying the lockdown and show that a one week delay would have doubled the reported number of cases in the US and India. Finally, we quantify the effect of college students returning back to school for the fall semester on COVID-19 dynamics in the surrounding community. We employ the data from a recent university outbreak (reported on August 16, 2020) to infer possible Reff values and mobility flows combined with daily prevalence data and census data to obtain an estimate of new cases that might arrive on a college campus. We find that maintaining social distancing at existing levels would be effective in mitigating the extra seeding of cases. However, potential behavioral change and increased social interaction amongst students (30% increase in Reff) along with extra seeding can increase the number of cases by 20% over a period of one month in the encompassing county. To our knowledge, this work is the first to model in near real-time, the interplay of human mobility, epidemic dynamics and public policies across multiple spatial resolutions and at a global scale.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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