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Evaluating Transmission Heterogeneity and Super-Spreading Event of COVID-19 in a Metropolis of China

Yunjun Zhang, Yuying Li, Lu Wang, Mingyuan Li, Xiaohua Zhou

2020International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health123 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

COVID-19 caused rapid mass infection worldwide. Understanding its transmission characteristics, including heterogeneity and the emergence of super spreading events (SSEs) where certain individuals infect large numbers of secondary cases, is of vital importance for prediction and intervention of future epidemics. Here, we collected information of all infected cases (135 cases) between 21 January and 26 February 2020 from official public sources in Tianjin, a metropolis of China, and grouped them into 43 transmission chains with the largest chain of 45 cases and the longest chain of four generations. Utilizing a heterogeneous transmission model based on branching process along with a negative binomial offspring distribution, we estimated the reproductive number R and the dispersion parameter k (lower value indicating higher heterogeneity) to be 0.67 (95% CI: 0.54–0.84) and 0.25 (95% CI: 0.13–0.88), respectively. A super-spreader causing six infections was identified in Tianjin. In addition, our simulation allowing for heterogeneity showed that the outbreak in Tianjin would have caused 165 infections and sustained for 7.56 generations on average if no control measures had been taken by local government since 28 January. Our results highlighted more efforts are needed to verify the transmission heterogeneity of COVID-19 in other populations and its contributing factors.

Topics & Concepts

OutbreakTransmission (telecommunications)Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)ChinaSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)DemographyNegative binomial distributionGeography2019-20 coronavirus outbreakBiologyVeterinary medicineStatisticsMedicineVirologyComputer scienceTelecommunicationsInternal medicineMathematicsPoisson distributionInfectious disease (medical specialty)SociologyArchaeologyDiseaseCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesSARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 ResearchViral Infections and Outbreaks Research
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