Frontiers in Public Health (Jun 2022)

A Chess and Card Room-Induced COVID-19 Outbreak and Its Agent-Based Simulation in Yangzhou, China

  • Shijing Shen,
  • Shijing Shen,
  • Wenning Li,
  • Wenning Li,
  • Hua Wei,
  • Hua Wei,
  • Lin Zhao,
  • Runze Ye,
  • Ke Ma,
  • Peng Xiao,
  • Na Jia,
  • Jieping Zhou,
  • Xiaoming Cui,
  • Jianhua Gong,
  • Jianhua Gong,
  • Wuchun Cao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2022.915716
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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ObjectiveTo evaluate epidemiological characteristics of the COVID-19 outbreak that resurged in Yangzhou and to simulate the impact of different control measures at different regional scales.MethodsWe collected personal information from 570 laboratory-confirmed cases in Yangzhou from 28 July to 26 August 2021, and built a modified susceptible-exposed-infected-removed (SEIR) model and an agent-based model.ResultsThe SEIR model showed that for passengers from medium-high risk areas, pre-travel nucleic acid testing within 3 days could limit the total number of infected people in Yangzhou to 50; among elderly persons, a 60% increase in vaccination rates could reduce the estimated infections by 253. The agent-based model showed that when the population density of the chess and card room dropped by 40%, the number of infected people would decrease by 54 within 7 days. A ventilation increase in the chess and card room from 25 to 50% could reduce the total number of infections by 33 within 7 days; increasing the ventilation from 25 to 75% could reduce the total number of infections by 63 within 7 days.ConclusionsThe SEIR model and agent-based model were used to simulate the impact of different control measures at different regional scales successfully. It is possible to provide references for epidemic prevention and control work.

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