Weekends as social distancing and their effect on the spread of influenza
Authored by Sarah M Bartsch, Bruce Y Lee, Shawn T Brown, William D Wheaton, Philip C Cooley, Diane K Wagener
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1007/s10588-015-9198-5
Sponsors:
United States National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Many published influenza models treat each simulation day as a weekday
and do not distinguish weekend days. Consequently, the weekend effect on
influenza transmission has not been fully explored. To assess whether
distinguishing between weekday and weekend transmissions in simulation
models of flu-like infectious disease models matters, this study uses an
agent-based model of the Chicago, Illinois metropolitan area. Our study
assesses whether including weekend effects is offset by increases in
weekend contact patterns and if implementing 3-day weekends dampens
disease transmission enough to warrant its use as a containment
strategy. Results indicate that ignoring weekend behaviors without
incorporating increases in community-based non-school contacts (i.e., compensatory behaviors) causes the peak case incidence day to occur 7
days earlier and can reduce the peak attack rate by as much as 60 \%.
These results are sensitive to the proportion of symptomatic cases that
are assumed to remain at home until they recover. The 3-day weekend
intervention has interesting possibilities, but the benefits may only be
effective for mild epidemics. However, a 3-day weekend for schools would
be less detrimental to the educational process than sustained permanent
closing because student and teacher contact is maintained throughout the
epidemic period. Also, a 4-day school and work week may be more easily
accommodated by many types of schools and businesses. On the other hand, an additional day per week of school closure could result in substantial
societal costs, with lost productivity and child care costs outweighing
the savings of preventing influenza cases.
Tags
networks
transmission
Pandemic influenza
Strategies
Impact
Vaccine
School closure
Economic value