Measuring unequal distribution of pandemic severity across census years, variants of concern and interventions
Quang Dang Nguyen, Sheryl L. Chang, Christina M. Jamerlan, Mikhail, Prokopenko

TL;DR
This study uses agent-based modeling to analyze how demographic changes, variants, and interventions affect COVID-19 severity distribution across Australian regions, revealing nonlinear effects and the importance of targeted policies.
Contribution
It introduces pandemic Lorenz curves to measure severity inequality and systematically compares multiple scenarios considering census data, variants, and interventions.
Findings
Population growth amplifies pandemic peaks.
Changes in population size impact incidence more than density.
Pandemic severity is unevenly distributed across local areas.
Abstract
Diverse and complex intervention policies deployed over the last years have shown varied effectiveness in controlling the COVID-19 pandemic. However, a systematic analysis and modelling of the combined effects of different viral lineages and complex intervention policies remains a challenge. Using large-scale agent-based modelling and a high-resolution computational simulation matching census-based demographics of Australia, we carried out a systematic comparative analysis of several COVID-19 pandemic scenarios. The scenarios covered two most recent Australian census years (2016 and 2021), three variants of concern (ancestral, Delta and Omicron), and five representative intervention policies. In addition, we introduced pandemic Lorenz curves measuring an unequal distribution of the pandemic severity across local areas. We quantified nonlinear effects of population heterogeneity on the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 epidemiological studies · Health disparities and outcomes · Influenza Virus Research Studies
