Publication | Open Access
Estimation of the Time-Varying Reproduction Number of COVID-19 Outbreak in China
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Citations
7
References
2020
Year
Unknown Venue
Virus EpidemiologyReproduction NumberEpidemiological DynamicCovid-19 OutbreakDisease OutbreakCovid-19 EpidemiologySerial IntervalCovid-19Pathogen DiscoveryInfectious Disease ModellingClinical EpidemiologyPublic HealthInfectious Disease EpidemiologyPathogen PrevalenceCovid-19 PandemicVirologyDisease SurveillanceTime-varying Reproduction NumberEpidemiologyEmerging Infectious Diseases2019-Ncov OutbreakMedicine
Background The 2019-nCoV outbreak in Wuhan, China has attracted world-wide attention. As of February 11, 2020, a total of 44730 cases of novel coronavirus-infected pneumonia associated with COVID-19 were confirmed by the National Health Commission of China. Methods Three approaches, namely Poisson likelihood-based method (ML), exponential growth rate-based method (EGR) and stochastic Susceptible-Infected-Removed dynamic model-based method (SIR), were implemented to estimate the basic and controlled reproduction numbers. Results A total of 71 chains of transmission together with dates of symptoms onset and 67 dates of infections were identified among 5405 confirmed cases outside Hubei as reported by February 2, 2020. Based on this information, we find the serial interval having an average of 4.41 days with a standard deviation of 3.17 days and the infectious period having an average of 10.91 days with a standard deviation of 3.95 days. Conclusions The controlled reproduction number is declining. It is lower than one in most regions of China, but is still larger than one in Hubei Province. Sustained efforts are needed to further reduce the R c to below one in order to end the current epidemic.
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