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Understanding how Victoria, Australia gained control of its second COVID-19 wave

James M. Trauer, Michael Lydeamore, Gregory W. Dalton, David Pilcher, Michael T. Meehan, Emma S. McBryde, Allen Cheng, Brett Sutton, Romain Ragonnet

2021Nature Communications36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

During 2020, Victoria was the Australian state hardest hit by COVID-19, but was successful in controlling its second wave through aggressive policy interventions. We calibrated a detailed compartmental model of Victoria's second wave to multiple geographically-structured epidemic time-series indicators. We achieved a good fit overall and for individual health services through a combination of time-varying processes, including case detection, population mobility, school closures, physical distancing and face covering usage. Estimates of the risk of death in those aged ≥75 and of hospitalisation were higher than international estimates, reflecting concentration of cases in high-risk settings. We estimated significant effects for each of the calibrated time-varying processes, with estimates for the individual-level effect of physical distancing of 37.4% (95%CrI 7.2-56.4%) and of face coverings of 45.9% (95%CrI 32.9-55.6%). That the multi-faceted interventions led to the dramatic reversal in the epidemic trajectory is supported by our results, with face coverings likely particularly important.

Topics & Concepts

DistancingCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Psychological interventionFace masksSocial distanceDemographyPopulationFace (sociological concept)GeographyDemographic economicsMedicineSociologyEconomicsNursingInfectious disease (medical specialty)Social scienceDiseasePathologyCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesCOVID-19 Pandemic ImpactsInfluenza Virus Research Studies
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