Individual-based modeling of COVID-19 transmission in college communities

Author:

Cator Durward1,Huang Qimin2,Mondal Anirban2,Ndeffo-Mbah Martial3,Gurarie David24

Affiliation:

1. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Texas A & M University, College Station, TX 77840, USA

2. Department of Mathematics, Applied Mathematics, and Statistics, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106, USA

3. Department of Veterinary and Integrative Biosciences, College of Veterinary and Biomedical Sciences, Texas A & M University, College Station, TX 77840, USA

4. Center for Global Health and Diseases, School of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106, USA

Abstract

<abstract> <p>The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has created major public health and socio-economic challenges across the United States. Among them are challenges to the educational system where college administrators are struggling with the questions of how to mitigate the risk and spread of diseases on their college campus. To help address this challenge, we developed a flexible computational framework to model the spread and control of COVID-19 on a residential college campus. The modeling framework accounts for heterogeneity in social interactions, activities, environmental and behavioral risk factors, disease progression, and control interventions. The contribution of mitigation strategies to disease transmission was explored without and with interventions such as vaccination, quarantine of symptomatic cases, and testing. We show that even with high vaccination coverage (90%) college campuses may still experience sizable outbreaks. The size of the outbreaks varies with the underlying environmental and socio-behavioral risk factors. Complementing vaccination with quarantine and mass testing was shown to be paramount for preventing or mitigating outbreaks. Though our quantitative results are likely provisional on our model assumptions, sensitivity analysis confirms the robustness of their qualitative nature.</p> </abstract>

Publisher

American Institute of Mathematical Sciences (AIMS)

Subject

Applied Mathematics,Computational Mathematics,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Modeling and Simulation,General Medicine

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