SARS-CoV-2 and Europe: timing of containment measures for outbreak control

  • PDF / 1,099,262 Bytes
  • 4 Pages / 595.276 x 790.866 pts Page_size
  • 64 Downloads / 126 Views

DOWNLOAD

REPORT


CORRESPONDENCE

SARS‑CoV‑2 and Europe: timing of containment measures for outbreak control Chenyu Li1 · Paola Romagnani2 · Albrecht von Brunn3 · Hans‑Joachim Anders1 Received: 17 March 2020 / Accepted: 28 March 2020 © The Author(s) 2020

To the editor, Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARSCoV-2) infection has reached pandemic proportions, because most infected individuals remain asymptomatic and undocumented [1], which facilitates the rapid dissemination of the virus across borders [2]. Within few weeks, SARS-CoV-2 has infected hundred thousands people in over 200 countries, albeit the numbers increase at a different pace in certain countries (Fig. 1). Singapore, like other Asian countries, installed effective containment measures early, which turned out effective in keeping case numbers low from the start (Singapore) or helped to escape the exponential increase in new infections at some point, e.g. in South Korea and Wuhan, China (Fig. 1) [3, 4]. For the uncertainties about the pathogenicity of SARS-Cov-2 compared to influenza virus Europe did not install strict containment measures early, so that since February 21, the numbers of infected people closely keep following an exponential trend (R0 = 2–3, Figs. 1 and 2) [5]. Italy has been most affected and only gradually installed nation-wide containment measures up to a complete lockdown on March 9. Meanwhile, the rest of Europe kept hesitating and started to install drastic containment measures not before March 15 so the basic reproduction number (R0) has remained > 2 (Fig. 2). A persistent R0 of > 2 implies that each infected individual keeps infecting more than two others, i.e. an ongoing exponential increase in infection numbers enforcing the epidemic, with all its consequences on healthcare system overload and mortality. * Hans‑Joachim Anders [email protected]‑muenchen.de 1



Medizinische Klinik Und Poliklinik IV, Klinikum Der Universität, 80336 Munich, Germany

2



Excellence Centre for Research, University of Florence, Florence, Italy

3

Max Von Pettenkofer‑Institute, LMU Munich and German Center for Infection Research (DZIF), Munich, Germany



It has been proposed by comparing the trend of the Italian outbreak with that of the Hubei province in China, that case numbers would start to deviate from the exponential increase around March 11 [6]. However, this assumption ignored that Italy`s lockdown was installed 13 days after the one of Hubei, when normalizing for the time when hitting 50 cases (Fig. 1). Indeed, judging from the numbers reported up to March 21 the Italian numbers of infected cases keep following the exponential trend (Fig. 3). Assuming that the Italian trend does not follow the Chinese experience because drastic containment measures had been taken much later in the course of the national epidemic, the question arises what we have to expect of the other European countries and the United States depending on their respective time delay in deciding for a national lockdown to limit the outbreak? Assuming that the definition of f