Dave Dhaval, Friedson Andrew, Matsuzawa Kyutaro, McNichols Drew, Redpath Connor, Sabia Joseph J
IZA and NBER, Bentley University, Waltham, MA USA.
University of Colorado Denver, Denver, CO USA.
J Risk Uncertain. 2021;63(2):133-167. doi: 10.1007/s11166-021-09359-4. Epub 2021 Oct 22.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) deem large indoor gatherings without social distancing the "highest risk" activity for COVID-19 contagion. On June 20, 2020, President Donald J. Trump held his first mass campaign rally following the US coronavirus outbreak at the indoor Bank of Oklahoma arena. In the weeks following the event, numerous high-profile national news outlets reported that the Trump rally was "more than likely" the cause of a coronavirus surge in Tulsa County based on time series data. This study is the first to rigorously explore the impacts of this event on social distancing and COVID-19 spread. First, using data from SafeGraph Inc, we show that while non-resident visits to census block groups hosting the Trump event grew by approximately 25 percent, there was no decline in net stay-at-home behavior in Tulsa County, reflecting important offsetting behavioral effects. Then, using data on COVID-19 cases from the CDC and a synthetic control design, we find little evidence that COVID-19 grew more rapidly in Tulsa County, its border counties, or in the state of Oklahoma than each's estimated counterfactual during the five-week post-treatment period we observe. Difference-in-differences estimates further provide no evidence that COVID-19 rates grew faster in counties that drew relatively larger shares of residents to the event. We conclude that offsetting risk-related behavioral responses to the rally-including voluntary closures of restaurants and bars in downtown Tulsa, increases in stay-at-home behavior, displacement of usual activities of weekend inflows, and smaller-than-expected crowd attendance-may be important mechanisms.
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s11166-021-09359-4.
美国疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)认为,在没有社交距离措施的情况下举行大型室内集会是新冠病毒传播的“最高风险”活动。2020年6月20日,唐纳德·J·特朗普总统在美国冠状病毒疫情爆发后,于俄克拉荷马银行室内竞技场举行了他的首次大规模竞选集会。在该活动后的几周里,众多知名国家新闻媒体根据时间序列数据报道称,特朗普集会“极有可能”是塔尔萨县冠状病毒激增的原因。本研究首次严格探讨了该活动对社交距离和新冠病毒传播的影响。首先,利用SafeGraph公司的数据,我们表明,虽然前往举办特朗普活动的人口普查街区组的非居民访问量增长了约25%,但塔尔萨县的净居家行为并未下降,这反映了重要的抵消行为效应。然后,利用美国疾病控制与预防中心的新冠病毒病例数据和合成对照设计,我们发现几乎没有证据表明,在我们观察的治疗后五周内,塔尔萨县、其边境县或俄克拉荷马州的新冠病毒增长速度比各自估计的反事实情况更快。差分估计进一步表明,没有证据表明,吸引了相对较多居民参加该活动的县的新冠病毒感染率增长得更快。我们得出结论,对集会的抵消风险相关行为反应——包括塔尔萨市中心餐馆和酒吧的自愿关闭、居家行为的增加、周末流入人口日常活动的转移以及到场人群规模小于预期——可能是重要机制。
在线版本包含可在10.1007/s11166-021-09359-4获取的补充材料。