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  1. Article: Risk of Secondary Infection Waves of COVID-19 in an Insular Region: The Case of the Balearic Islands, Spain.

    Eguíluz, Víctor M / Fernández-Gracia, Juan / Rodríguez, Jorge P / Pericàs, Juan M / Melián, Carlos

    Frontiers in medicine

    2020  Volume 7, Page(s) 563455

    Abstract: ... therefore facilitating the propagation of new outbreaks that could lead to secondary waves of COVID-19 in the region ... of COVID-19. As a consequence, the Balearic Islands remained almost fully isolated due to the closing ... of COVID-19 in this region. We propose a compartmental model for the spread of COVID-19 including five ...

    Abstract The Spanish government declared the lockdown on March 14th, 2020 to tackle the fast-spreading of COVID-19. As a consequence, the Balearic Islands remained almost fully isolated due to the closing of airports and ports, these isolation measures and the home-based confinement have led to a low prevalence of COVID-19 in this region. We propose a compartmental model for the spread of COVID-19 including five compartments (Susceptible, Exposed, Presymptomatic Infective, Diseased, and Recovered), and the mobility between municipalities. The model parameters are calibrated with the temporal series of confirmed cases provided by the Spanish Ministry of Health. After calibration, the proposed model captures the trend of the official confirmed cases before and after the lockdown. We show that the estimated number of cases depends strongly on the initial dates of the local outbreak onset and the number of imported cases before the lockdown. Our estimations indicate that the population has not reached the level of herd immunization necessary to prevent future outbreaks. While the low prevalence, in comparison to mainland Spain, has prevented the saturation of the health system, this low prevalence translates into low immunization rates, therefore facilitating the propagation of new outbreaks that could lead to secondary waves of COVID-19 in the region. These findings warn about scenarios regarding after-lockdown-policies and the risk of second outbreaks, emphasize the need for widespread testing, and could potentially be extrapolated to other insular and continental regions.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-12-15
    Publishing country Switzerland
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2775999-4
    ISSN 2296-858X
    ISSN 2296-858X
    DOI 10.3389/fmed.2020.563455
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Article ; Online: Risk of secondary infection waves of COVID-19 in an insular region: the case of the Balearic Islands, Spain

    Eguiluz, V. M. / Fernadez-Gracia, J. / Rodriguez, J. P. / Pericas, J. M. / Melian, C. J.

    Abstract: ... the propagation of new outbreaks that could lead to secondary waves of COVID-19 in the region. These findings warn ... of COVID-19. As a consequence the Balearic Islands remained almost fully isolated due to the closing ... of COVID-19 in this region. We propose a compartmental model for the spread of COVID-19 including five ...

    Abstract The Spanish government declared the lockdown on March 14th, 2020 to tackle the fast-spreading of COVID-19. As a consequence the Balearic Islands remained almost fully isolated due to the closing of airports and ports, These isolation measures and the home-based confinement have led to a low incidence of COVID-19 in this region. We propose a compartmental model for the spread of COVID-19 including five compartments (Susceptible, Latent, Infected, Diseased, and Recovered), and the mobility between municipalities. The model parameters are calibrated with the temporal series of confirmed cases provided by the Spanish Ministry of Health. After calibration, the proposed model captures the trend of the official confirmed cases before and after the lockdown. We show that the estimated number of cases depends strongly on the initial dates of the local outbreak onset and the number of imported cases before the lockdown. Our estimations indicate that the population has not reached the level of herd immunization necessary to prevent future outbreaks. While the low incidence, in comparison to mainland Spain, has prevented the saturation of the health system, this low incidence translates into low immunization rates, therefore facilitating the propagation of new outbreaks that could lead to secondary waves of COVID-19 in the region. These findings warn about scenarios regarding after-lockdown-policies and the risk of second outbreaks, emphasize the need for widespread testing, and could potentially be extrapolated to other insular and continental regions.
    Keywords covid19
    Publisher MedRxiv; WHO
    Document type Article ; Online
    DOI 10.1101/2020.05.03.20089623
    Database COVID19

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  3. Article ; Online: Risk of secondary infection waves of COVID-19 in an insular region: the case of the Balearic Islands, Spain

    Eguiluz, Victor M. / Fernadez-Gracia, Juan / Rodriguez, Jorge P. / Pericas, Juan M. / Melian, Carlos J.

    medRxiv

    Abstract: ... the propagation of new outbreaks that could lead to secondary waves of COVID-19 in the region. These findings warn ... of COVID-19. As a consequence the Balearic Islands remained almost fully isolated due to the closing ... of COVID-19 in this region. We propose a compartmental model for the spread of COVID-19 including five ...

    Abstract The Spanish government declared the lockdown on March 14th, 2020 to tackle the fast-spreading of COVID-19. As a consequence the Balearic Islands remained almost fully isolated due to the closing of airports and ports, These isolation measures and the home-based confinement have led to a low incidence of COVID-19 in this region. We propose a compartmental model for the spread of COVID-19 including five compartments (Susceptible, Latent, Infected, Diseased, and Recovered), and the mobility between municipalities. The model parameters are calibrated with the temporal series of confirmed cases provided by the Spanish Ministry of Health. After calibration, the proposed model captures the trend of the official confirmed cases before and after the lockdown. We show that the estimated number of cases depends strongly on the initial dates of the local outbreak onset and the number of imported cases before the lockdown. Our estimations indicate that the population has not reached the level of herd immunization necessary to prevent future outbreaks. While the low incidence, in comparison to mainland Spain, has prevented the saturation of the health system, this low incidence translates into low immunization rates, therefore facilitating the propagation of new outbreaks that could lead to secondary waves of COVID-19 in the region. These findings warn about scenarios regarding after-lockdown-policies and the risk of second outbreaks, emphasize the need for widespread testing, and could potentially be extrapolated to other insular and continental regions.
    Keywords covid19
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-05-08
    Publisher Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
    Document type Article ; Online
    DOI 10.1101/2020.05.03.20089623
    Database COVID19

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  4. Article ; Online: Risk of secondary infection waves of COVID-19 in an insular region

    Eguíluz, Víctor M. / Fernández-Gracia, Juan / Rodríguez-García, Jorge Pablo / Pericás Pulico, Juan Manuel / Melián, Carlos J.

    the case of the Balearic Islands, Spain ; Secondary waves of COVID-19 in the Balearic Islands

    2020  

    Abstract: ... the propagation of new outbreaks that could lead to secondary waves of COVID-19 in the region. These findings warn ... of COVID-19. As a consequence the Balearic Islands remained almost fully isolated due to the closing ... of COVID-19 in this region. We propose a compartmental model for the spread of COVID-19 including five ...

    Abstract The Spanish government declared the lockdown on March 14th, 2020 to tackle the fast-spreading of COVID-19. As a consequence the Balearic Islands remained almost fully isolated due to the closing of airports and ports, These isolation measures and the home-based confinement have led to a low incidence of COVID-19 in this region. We propose a compartmental model for the spread of COVID-19 including five compartments (Susceptible, Latent, Infected, Diseased, and Recovered), and the mobility between municipalities. The model parameters are calibrated with the temporal series of confirmed cases provided by the Spanish Ministry of Health. After calibration, the proposed model captures the trend of the official confirmed cases before and after the lockdown. We show that the estimated number of cases depends strongly on the initial dates of the local outbreak onset and the number of imported cases before the lockdown. Our estimations indicate that the population has not reached the level of herd immunization necessary to prevent future outbreaks. While the low incidence, in comparison to mainland Spain, has prevented the saturation of the health system, this low incidence translates into low immunization rates, therefore facilitating the propagation of new outbreaks that could lead to secondary waves of COVID-19 in the region. These findings warn about scenarios regarding after-lockdown-policies and the risk of second outbreaks, emphasize the need for widespread testing, and could potentially be extrapolated to other insular and continental regions.

    V.M.E. and J.F.G. acknowledge funding from the Ministry of Science and Innovation (Spain) and FEDER through project SPASIMM [FIS2016-80067-P (AEI/FEDER, UE)]. JFG acknowledges funding through the postdoc program of the University of the Balearic Islands.

    No
    Keywords COVID-19 ; Epidemic projection ; Secondary outbreaks ; Computational modeling ; covid19
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-05-08
    Publisher MedRxiv
    Publishing country es
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  5. Article ; Online: Risk of Secondary Infection Waves of COVID-19 in an Insular Region

    Víctor M. Eguíluz / Juan Fernández-Gracia / Jorge P. Rodríguez / Juan M. Pericàs / Carlos Melián

    Frontiers in Medicine, Vol

    The Case of the Balearic Islands, Spain

    2020  Volume 7

    Abstract: ... therefore facilitating the propagation of new outbreaks that could lead to secondary waves of COVID-19 in the region ... of COVID-19. As a consequence, the Balearic Islands remained almost fully isolated due to the closing ... of COVID-19 in this region. We propose a compartmental model for the spread of COVID-19 including five ...

    Abstract The Spanish government declared the lockdown on March 14th, 2020 to tackle the fast-spreading of COVID-19. As a consequence, the Balearic Islands remained almost fully isolated due to the closing of airports and ports, these isolation measures and the home-based confinement have led to a low prevalence of COVID-19 in this region. We propose a compartmental model for the spread of COVID-19 including five compartments (Susceptible, Exposed, Presymptomatic Infective, Diseased, and Recovered), and the mobility between municipalities. The model parameters are calibrated with the temporal series of confirmed cases provided by the Spanish Ministry of Health. After calibration, the proposed model captures the trend of the official confirmed cases before and after the lockdown. We show that the estimated number of cases depends strongly on the initial dates of the local outbreak onset and the number of imported cases before the lockdown. Our estimations indicate that the population has not reached the level of herd immunization necessary to prevent future outbreaks. While the low prevalence, in comparison to mainland Spain, has prevented the saturation of the health system, this low prevalence translates into low immunization rates, therefore facilitating the propagation of new outbreaks that could lead to secondary waves of COVID-19 in the region. These findings warn about scenarios regarding after-lockdown-policies and the risk of second outbreaks, emphasize the need for widespread testing, and could potentially be extrapolated to other insular and continental regions.
    Keywords COVID-19 ; epidemic projection ; secondary outbreaks ; computational modeling ; herd immunization ; Medicine (General) ; R5-920
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-12-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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