Department of Civil, Environmental, and Geo- Engineering, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2021 Jan 22;16(1):e0245919. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0245919. eCollection 2021.
The novel coronavirus responsible for COVID-19 was first identified in Hubei Province, China in December, 2019. Within a matter of months the virus had spread and become a global pandemic. In addition to international air travel, local travel (e.g. by passenger car) contributes to the geographic spread of COVID-19. We modify the common susceptible-exposed-infectious-removed (SEIR) virus spread model and investigate the extent to which short-term travel associated with driving influences the spread of the virus. We consider the case study of the US state of Minnesota, and calibrated the proposed model with travel and viral spread data. Using our modified SEIR model that considers local short-term travel, we are able to better explain the virus spread than using the long-term travel SEIR model. Short-term travel associated with driving is predicted to be a significant contributor to the historical and future spread of COVID-19. The calibrated model also predicts the proportion of infections that were detected. We find that if driving trips remain at current levels, a substantial increase in COVID-19 cases may be observed in Minnesota, while decreasing intrastate travel could help contain the virus spread.
导致 COVID-19 的新型冠状病毒于 2019 年 12 月在中国湖北省首次被发现。在短短几个月内,该病毒已传播并成为全球大流行。除了国际航空旅行外,当地旅行(例如乘私家车)也导致 COVID-19 的地理传播。我们修改了常见的易感-暴露-感染-清除(SEIR)病毒传播模型,并研究了与驾驶相关的短期旅行在多大程度上影响病毒的传播。我们以美国明尼苏达州为例进行了案例研究,并利用旅行和病毒传播数据对提出的模型进行了校准。使用考虑到当地短期旅行的修改后的 SEIR 模型,我们能够比使用长期旅行 SEIR 模型更好地解释病毒的传播。与驾驶相关的短期旅行预计将是 COVID-19 历史和未来传播的重要因素。校准后的模型还预测了已检测到的感染比例。我们发现,如果驾驶出行保持目前水平,明尼苏达州可能会观察到 COVID-19 病例的大量增加,而减少州内旅行则有助于控制病毒传播。