Leeds Institute for Data Analytics, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom.
Faculty of Environment, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2022 Apr 14;17(4):e0263432. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0263432. eCollection 2022.
During the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, the United Kingdom experienced one of the highest per-capita death tolls worldwide. It is debated whether this may partly be explained by the relatively late initiation of voluntary social distancing and mandatory lockdown measures. In this study, we used simulations to estimate the number of cases and deaths that would have occurred in England by 1 June 2020 if these interventions had been implemented one or two weeks earlier, and the impact on the required duration of lockdown.
Using official reported data on the number of Pillar 1 lab-confirmed cases of COVID-19 and associated deaths occurring in England from 3 March to 1 June, we modelled: the natural (i.e. observed) growth of cases, and the counterfactual (i.e. hypothetical) growth of cases that would have occurred had measures been implemented one or two weeks earlier. Under each counterfactual condition, we estimated the expected number of deaths and the time required to reach the incidence observed under natural growth on 1 June.
Introducing measures one week earlier would have reduced by 74% the number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in England by 1 June, resulting in approximately 21,000 fewer hospital deaths and 34,000 fewer total deaths; the required time spent in full lockdown could also have been halved, from 69 to 35 days. Acting two weeks earlier would have reduced cases by 93%, resulting in between 26,000 and 43,000 fewer deaths.
Our modelling supports the claim that the relatively late introduction of social distancing and lockdown measures likely increased the scale, severity, and duration of the first wave of COVID-19 in England. Our results highlight the importance of acting swiftly to minimise the spread of an infectious disease when case numbers are increasing exponentially.
在 COVID-19 大流行的第一波期间,英国经历了全球人均死亡人数最高的国家之一。有人争论说,这可能部分是由于自愿社交距离和强制性封锁措施的实施相对较晚。在这项研究中,我们使用模拟来估计如果这些干预措施提前一到两周实施,英格兰在 2020 年 6 月 1 日之前会发生多少病例和死亡人数,以及对封锁所需持续时间的影响。
使用官方报告的英格兰从 3 月 3 日至 6 月 1 日期间第 1 支柱实验室确诊的 COVID-19 病例和相关死亡人数的数据,我们模拟了:病例的自然(即观察到的)增长,以及如果措施提前一到两周实施,病例的反事实(即假设的)增长。在每种反事实情况下,我们估计了预期的死亡人数和达到 6 月 1 日自然增长下观察到的发病率所需的时间。
提前一周实施措施将使英格兰 6 月 1 日的确诊 COVID-19 病例数减少 74%,从而减少约 21,000 例住院死亡和 34,000 例总死亡;完全封锁所需的时间也可以减半,从 69 天减少到 35 天。提前两周实施将使病例减少 93%,从而减少 26,000 至 43,000 例死亡。
我们的模型支持这样的说法,即社交距离和封锁措施的实施相对较晚可能增加了 COVID-19 在英国第一波的规模、严重程度和持续时间。我们的结果强调了在病例数量呈指数增长时迅速采取行动以最大程度减少传染病传播的重要性。