La Trobe

Optimal timing of one-shot interventions for epidemic control

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journal contribution
posted on 2021-04-12, 04:55 authored by Francesco Di Lauro, Istvan Z Kiss, Joel MillerJoel Miller
The interventions and outcomes in the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic are highly varied. The disease and the interventions both impose costs and harm on society. Some interventions with particularly high costs may only be implemented briefly. The design of optimal policy requires consideration of many intervention scenarios. In this paper we investigate the optimal timing of interventions that are not sustainable for a long period. Specifically, we look at at the impact of a single short-term non-repeated intervention (a “one-shot intervention”) on an epidemic and consider the impact of the intervention’s timing. To minimize the total number infected, the intervention should start close to the peak so that there is minimal rebound once the intervention is stopped. To minimise the peak prevalence, it should start earlier, leading to initial reduction and then having a rebound to the same prevalence as the pre-intervention peak rather than one very large peak. To delay infections as much as possible (as might be appropriate if we expect improved interventions or treatments to be developed), earlier interventions have clear benefit. In populations with distinct subgroups, synchronized interventions are less effective than targeting the interventions in each subcommunity separately.

Funding

IZK and FD acknowledge support from the Leverhulme Trust https://www.leverhulme.ac.uk/for the Research Project Grant RPG-2017-370. JCM acknowledges startup funding from La Trobe University https://www.latrobe.edu.au/.The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

History

Publication Date

2021-03-01

Journal

PLOS Computational Biology

Volume

17

Issue

3

Article Number

e1008763

Pagination

24p.

Publisher

PLOS

ISSN

1553-7358

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