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Estimating the Prevalence of COVID-19 in the United States: Three Complementary Approaches
Fred S Lu; Andre T Nguyen; Nicholas B Link; Jessica T Davis; Matteo Chinazzi; Xinyue Xiong; Alessandro Vespignani; Marc Lipsitch; Mauricio Santillana.
Afiliação
  • Fred S Lu; Stanford
  • Andre T Nguyen; University of Maryland, Baltimore County
  • Nicholas B Link; Boston Children's Hospital
  • Jessica T Davis; Northeastern University
  • Matteo Chinazzi; Northeastern University
  • Xinyue Xiong; Northeastern University
  • Alessandro Vespignani; Northeastern University
  • Marc Lipsitch; Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
  • Mauricio Santillana; Harvard Medical School
Preprint em En | PREPRINT-MEDRXIV | ID: ppmedrxiv-20070821
ABSTRACT
Effectively designing and evaluating public health responses to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic requires accurate estimation of the prevalence of COVID-19 across the United States (US). Equipment shortages and varying testing capabilities have however hindered the usefulness of the official reported positive COVID-19 case counts. We introduce four complementary approaches to estimate the cumulative incidence of symptomatic COVID-19 in each state in the US as well as Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia, using a combination of excess influenza-like illness reports, COVID-19 test statistics, COVID-19 mortality reports, and a spatially structured epidemic model. Instead of relying on the estimate from a single data source or method that may be biased, we provide multiple estimates, each relying on different assumptions and data sources. Across our four approaches emerges the consistent conclusion that on April 4, 2020, the estimated case count was 5 to 50 times higher than the official positive test counts across the different states. Nationally, our estimates of COVID-19 symptomatic cases as of April 4 have a likely range of 2.2 to 4.9 million, with possibly as many as 8.1 million cases, up to 26 times greater than the cumulative confirmed cases of about 311,000. Extending our method to May 16, 2020, we estimate that cumulative symptomatic incidence ranges from 6.0 to 10.3 million, as opposed to 1.5 million positive test counts. The proposed combination of approaches may prove useful in assessing the burden of COVID-19 during resurgences in the US and other countries with comparable surveillance systems.
Licença
cc_by_nc_nd
Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 09-preprints Base de dados: PREPRINT-MEDRXIV Tipo de estudo: Experimental_studies / Observational_studies Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2020 Tipo de documento: Preprint
Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 09-preprints Base de dados: PREPRINT-MEDRXIV Tipo de estudo: Experimental_studies / Observational_studies Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2020 Tipo de documento: Preprint