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1.
Preprint in English | medRxiv | ID: ppmedrxiv-22281855

ABSTRACT

COVID-19 has disproportionately impacted individuals depending on where they live and work, and based on their race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status. Studies have documented catastrophic disparities at critical points throughout the pandemic, but have not yet systematically tracked their severity through time. Using anonymized hospitalization data from March 11, 2020 to June 1, 2021, we estimate the time-varying burden of COVID-19 by age group and ZIP code in Austin, Texas. During this 15-month period, we estimate an overall 16.9% (95% CrI: 16.1-17.8%) infection rate and 34.1% (95% CrI: 32.4-35.8%) case reporting rate. Individuals over 65 were less likely to be infected than younger age groups (8.0% [95% CrI: 7.5-8.6%] vs 18.1% [95% CrI: 17.2-19.2%]), but more likely to be hospitalized (1,381 per 100,000 vs 319 per 100,000) and have their infections reported (51% [95% CrI: 48-55%] vs 33% [95% CrI: 31-35%]). Children under 18, who make up 20.3% of the local population, accounted for only 5.5% (95% CrI: 3.8-7.7%) of all infections between March 1 and May 1, 2020 compared with 20.4% (95% CrI: 17.3-23.9%) between December 1, 2020 and February 1, 2021. We compared ZIP codes ranking in the 75th percentile of vulnerability to those in the 25th percentile, and found that the more vulnerable communities had 2.5 (95% CrI: 2.0-3.0) times the infection rate and only 70% (95% CrI: 61%-82%) the reporting rate compared to the less vulnerable communities. Inequality persisted but declined significantly over the 15-month study period. For example, the ratio in infection rates between the more and less vulnerable communities declined from 12.3 (95% CrI: 8.8-17.1) to 4.0 (95% CrI: 3.0-5.3) to 2.7 (95% CrI: 2.0-3.6), from April to August to December of 2020, respectively. Our results suggest that public health efforts to mitigate COVID-19 disparities were only partially effective and that the CDCs social vulnerability index may serve as a reliable predictor of risk on a local scale when surveillance data are limited.

2.
Preprint in English | medRxiv | ID: ppmedrxiv-20152520

ABSTRACT

Community mitigation strategies to combat COVID-19, ranging from healthy hygiene to shelter-in-place orders, exact substantial socioeconomic costs. Judicious implementation and relaxation of restrictions amplify their public health benefits while reducing costs. We derive optimal strategies for toggling between mitigation stages using daily COVID-19 hospital admissions. With public compliance, the policy triggers ensure adequate intensive care unit capacity with high probability while minimizing the duration of strict mitigation measures. In comparison, we show that other sensible COVID-19 staging policies, including Frances ICU-based thresholds and a widely adopted indicator for reopening schools and businesses, require overly restrictive measures or trigger strict stages too late to avert catastrophic surges. As cities worldwide face future pandemic waves, our findings provide a robust strategy for tracking COVID-19 hospital admissions as an early indicator of hospital surges and enacting staged measures to ensure integrity of the health system, safety of the health workforce, and public confidence.

3.
Preprint in English | medRxiv | ID: ppmedrxiv-20225409

ABSTRACT

Policymakers make decisions about COVID-19 management in the face of considerable uncertainty. We convened multiple modeling teams to evaluate reopening strategies for a mid-sized county in the United States, in a novel process designed to fully express scientific uncertainty while reducing linguistic uncertainty and cognitive biases. For the scenarios considered, the consensus from 17 distinct models was that a second outbreak will occur within 6 months of reopening, unless schools and non-essential workplaces remain closed. Up to half the population could be infected with full workplace reopening; non-essential business closures reduced median cumulative infections by 82%. Intermediate reopening interventions identified no win-win situations; there was a trade-off between public health outcomes and duration of workplace closures. Aggregate results captured twice the uncertainty of individual models, providing a more complete expression of risk for decision-making purposes.

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