Litcius/Paper detail

Effects of information-induced behavioural changes during the COVID-19 lockdowns: the case of Italy

Bruno Buonomo, Rossella Della Marca

2020Royal Society Open Science95 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic that started in China in December 2019 has not only threatened world public health, but severely impacted almost every facet of life, including behavioural and psychological aspects. In this paper, we focus on the 'human element' and propose a mathematical model to investigate the effects on the COVID-19 epidemic of social behavioural changes in response to lockdowns. We consider an SEIR-like epidemic model where the contact and quarantine rates depend on the available information and rumours about the disease status in the community. The model is applied to the case of the COVID-19 epidemic in Italy. We consider the period that stretches between 24 February 2020, when the first bulletin by the Italian Civil Protection was reported and 18 May 2020, when the lockdown restrictions were mostly removed. The role played by the information-related parameters is determined by evaluating how they affect suitable outbreak-severity indicators. We estimate that citizen compliance with mitigation measures played a decisive role in curbing the epidemic curve by preventing a duplication of deaths and about 46% more infections.

Topics & Concepts

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)PandemicQuarantineOutbreakChinaEpidemic modelSocial distancePublic healthSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)Demography2019-20 coronavirus outbreakThreatened speciesGeographyEnvironmental healthDiseaseMedicineInfectious disease (medical specialty)VirologySociologyPopulationBiologyArchaeologyNursingEcologyHabitatPathologyCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesMisinformation and Its ImpactsOpinion Dynamics and Social Influence