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Modeling transmission of SARS-CoV-2 Omicron in China
by
Zou, Junyi
, Wu, Qianhui
, Liu, Hengcong
, Liang, Yuxia
, Chen, Xinhua
, Chen, Zhiyuan
, Zhao, Zeyao
, Ajelli, Marco
, Yu, Hongjie
, Sun, Kaiyuan
, Deng, Xiaowei
, Sun, Ruijia
, Zhou, Xiaoyu
, Cai, Jun
, Peng, Cheng
, Yang, Juan
, Lu, Wanying
, Zheng, Wen
in
692/308/174
/ 692/699/255/2514
/ Antiviral Agents
/ Antiviral drugs
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Cancer Research
/ China - epidemiology
/ COVID-19
/ COVID-19 - epidemiology
/ COVID-19 vaccines
/ Fatalities
/ Health care
/ Humans
/ Immunity
/ Infectious Diseases
/ Intensive care
/ Metabolic Diseases
/ Modelling
/ Molecular Medicine
/ Neurosciences
/ Peak demand
/ SARS-CoV-2
/ Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
/ Vaccine efficacy
/ Vaccines
/ Viral diseases
2022
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Modeling transmission of SARS-CoV-2 Omicron in China
by
Zou, Junyi
, Wu, Qianhui
, Liu, Hengcong
, Liang, Yuxia
, Chen, Xinhua
, Chen, Zhiyuan
, Zhao, Zeyao
, Ajelli, Marco
, Yu, Hongjie
, Sun, Kaiyuan
, Deng, Xiaowei
, Sun, Ruijia
, Zhou, Xiaoyu
, Cai, Jun
, Peng, Cheng
, Yang, Juan
, Lu, Wanying
, Zheng, Wen
in
692/308/174
/ 692/699/255/2514
/ Antiviral Agents
/ Antiviral drugs
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Cancer Research
/ China - epidemiology
/ COVID-19
/ COVID-19 - epidemiology
/ COVID-19 vaccines
/ Fatalities
/ Health care
/ Humans
/ Immunity
/ Infectious Diseases
/ Intensive care
/ Metabolic Diseases
/ Modelling
/ Molecular Medicine
/ Neurosciences
/ Peak demand
/ SARS-CoV-2
/ Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
/ Vaccine efficacy
/ Vaccines
/ Viral diseases
2022
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Do you wish to request the book?
Modeling transmission of SARS-CoV-2 Omicron in China
by
Zou, Junyi
, Wu, Qianhui
, Liu, Hengcong
, Liang, Yuxia
, Chen, Xinhua
, Chen, Zhiyuan
, Zhao, Zeyao
, Ajelli, Marco
, Yu, Hongjie
, Sun, Kaiyuan
, Deng, Xiaowei
, Sun, Ruijia
, Zhou, Xiaoyu
, Cai, Jun
, Peng, Cheng
, Yang, Juan
, Lu, Wanying
, Zheng, Wen
in
692/308/174
/ 692/699/255/2514
/ Antiviral Agents
/ Antiviral drugs
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Cancer Research
/ China - epidemiology
/ COVID-19
/ COVID-19 - epidemiology
/ COVID-19 vaccines
/ Fatalities
/ Health care
/ Humans
/ Immunity
/ Infectious Diseases
/ Intensive care
/ Metabolic Diseases
/ Modelling
/ Molecular Medicine
/ Neurosciences
/ Peak demand
/ SARS-CoV-2
/ Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
/ Vaccine efficacy
/ Vaccines
/ Viral diseases
2022
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Journal Article
Modeling transmission of SARS-CoV-2 Omicron in China
2022
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Overview
Having adopted a dynamic zero-COVID strategy to respond to SARS-CoV-2 variants with higher transmissibility since August 2021, China is now considering whether, and for how long, this policy can remain in place. The debate has thus shifted towards the identification of mitigation strategies for minimizing disruption to the healthcare system in the case of a nationwide epidemic. To this aim, we developed an age-structured stochastic compartmental susceptible-latent-infectious-removed-susceptible model of SARS-CoV-2 transmission calibrated on the initial growth phase for the 2022 Omicron outbreak in Shanghai, to project COVID-19 burden (that is, number of cases, patients requiring hospitalization and intensive care, and deaths) under hypothetical mitigation scenarios. The model also considers age-specific vaccine coverage data, vaccine efficacy against different clinical endpoints, waning of immunity, different antiviral therapies and nonpharmaceutical interventions. We find that the level of immunity induced by the March 2022 vaccination campaign would be insufficient to prevent an Omicron wave that would result in exceeding critical care capacity with a projected intensive care unit peak demand of 15.6 times the existing capacity and causing approximately 1.55 million deaths. However, we also estimate that protecting vulnerable individuals by ensuring accessibility to vaccines and antiviral therapies, and maintaining implementation of nonpharmaceutical interventions could be sufficient to prevent overwhelming the healthcare system, suggesting that these factors should be points of emphasis in future mitigation policies.
Estimates from a new modeling study suggest that current levels of vaccine coverage in China are insufficient to prevent overwhelming the healthcare system, and that, if left untreated, a nationwide Omicron wave could result in up to 1.55 million deaths.
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group US,Nature Publishing Group
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