Mathematical Modeling and Investigation on the Role of Demography and Contact Patterns in Social Distancing Measures Effectiveness in COVID-19 Dissemination
M. A. Ridenti, L. K. Teles, A. Maranh\~ao, V. K. Teles

TL;DR
This study models COVID-19 spread considering demographic and contact patterns, showing how different social distancing policies vary in effectiveness across countries with different age structures.
Contribution
It introduces an age-structured epidemiological model to evaluate social distancing policies' effectiveness in diverse demographic contexts.
Findings
Older populations have lower R0 due to fewer contacts.
Work restrictions and community distancing are most effective in reducing transmission.
School closures are less effective but still impactful in less developed countries.
Abstract
In this article, we investigate the importance of demographic and contact patterns in determining the spread of COVID-19 and to the effectiveness of social distancing policies. We investigate these questions proposing an augmented epidemiological model with an age-structured model, with the population divided into susceptible (S), exposed (E), infected and asymptomatic (A), hospitalized (H), infected and symptomatic (I), and recovered individuals (R), to simulate COVID-19 dissemination. The simulations were carried out using six combinations of four types of isolation policies (work restrictions, isolation of the elderly, community distancing and school closures) and four representative fictitious countries generated over alternative demographic transition stage patterns (aged developed, developed, developing and least developed countries). We concluded that the basic reproduction…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 epidemiological studies
