Spatial scales of COVID-19 transmission in Mexico
Brennan Klein, Harrison Hartle, Munik Shrestha, Ana Cecilia, Zenteno, David Barros Sierra Cordera, Jos\'e R. Nicolas-Carlock, Ana, I. Bento, Benjamin M. Althouse, Bernardo Gutierrez, Marina, Escalera-Zamudio, Arturo Reyes-Sandoval, Oliver G. Pybus, Alessandro, Vespignani

TL;DR
This study analyzes how human mobility patterns and spatial scales influenced COVID-19 transmission in Mexico, revealing the impact of interventions on mobility networks and epidemic synchronization.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of mobility-driven transmission dynamics and the effects of interventions on spatial scales during Mexico's COVID-19 first wave.
Findings
Early outbreaks driven by Mexico State and Mexico City
Mobility networks became more disjointed after interventions
Epidemics in communities became increasingly synchronized
Abstract
During outbreaks of emerging infectious diseases, internationally connected cities often experience large and early outbreaks, while rural regions follow after some delay. This hierarchical structure of disease spread is influenced primarily by the multiscale structure of human mobility. However, during the COVID-19 epidemic, public health responses typically did not take into consideration the explicit spatial structure of human mobility when designing non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs). NPIs were applied primarily at national or regional scales. Here we use weekly anonymized and aggregated human mobility data and spatially highly resolved data on COVID-19 cases, deaths and hospitalizations at the municipality level in Mexico to investigate how behavioural changes in response to the pandemic have altered the spatial scales of transmission and interventions during its first wave…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 epidemiological studies · Data-Driven Disease Surveillance · Zoonotic diseases and public health
