An epidemic model for COVID-19 transmission in Argentina: Exploration of the alternating quarantine and massive testing strategies
Lautaro Vassallo, Ignacio A. Perez, Lucila G. Alvarez-Zuzek, Juli\'an, Amaya, Marcos F. Torres, Lucas D. Valdez, Cristian E. La Rocca, Lidia A., Braunstein

TL;DR
This paper develops an extended COVID-19 epidemic model for Mar del Plata, Argentina, to evaluate alternating quarantine and testing strategies, highlighting optimal quarantine durations and potential impacts on healthcare resources.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed local epidemic model incorporating social structure, illness severity, and resource data, and analyzes the effectiveness of alternating quarantine and testing strategies.
Findings
A 7-day quarantine cycle effectively reduces infections.
ICU capacity may be overwhelmed under current restrictions.
Aggressive testing increases safe circulation without overburdening healthcare.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has challenged authorities at different levels of government administration around the globe. When faced with diseases of this severity, it is useful for the authorities to have prediction tools to estimate in advance the impact on the health system and the human, material, and economic resources that will be necessary. In this paper, we construct an extended Susceptible-Exposed-Infected-Recovered model that incorporates the social structure of Mar del Plata, the most inhabited city in Argentina and head of the Municipality of General Pueyrred\'on. Moreover, we consider detailed partitions of infected individuals according to the illness severity, as well as data of local health resources, to bring these predictions closer to the local reality. Tuning the corresponding epidemic parameters for COVID-19, we study an alternating quarantine strategy, in which…
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