PLoS Computational Biology (Sep 2023)

Marginal effects of public health measures and COVID-19 disease burden in China: A large-scale modelling study.

  • Zengmiao Wang,
  • Peiyi Wu,
  • Lin Wang,
  • Bingying Li,
  • Yonghong Liu,
  • Yuxi Ge,
  • Ruixue Wang,
  • Ligui Wang,
  • Hua Tan,
  • Chieh-Hsi Wu,
  • Marko Laine,
  • Henrik Salje,
  • Hongbin Song

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1011492
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 9
p. e1011492

Abstract

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China had conducted some of the most stringent public health measures to control the spread of successive SARS-CoV-2 variants. However, the effectiveness of these measures and their impacts on the associated disease burden have rarely been quantitatively assessed at the national level. To address this gap, we developed a stochastic age-stratified metapopulation model that incorporates testing, contact tracing and isolation, based on 419 million travel movements among 366 Chinese cities. The study period for this model began from September 2022. The COVID-19 disease burden was evaluated, considering 8 types of underlying health conditions in the Chinese population. We identified the marginal effects between the testing speed and reduction in the epidemic duration. The findings suggest that assuming a vaccine coverage of 89%, the Omicron-like wave could be suppressed by 3-day interval population-level testing (PLT), while it would become endemic with 4-day interval PLT, and without testing, it would result in an epidemic. PLT conducted every 3 days would not only eliminate infections but also keep hospital bed occupancy at less than 29.46% (95% CI, 22.73-38.68%) of capacity for respiratory illness and ICU bed occupancy at less than 58.94% (95% CI, 45.70-76.90%) during an outbreak. Furthermore, the underlying health conditions would lead to an extra 2.35 (95% CI, 1.89-2.92) million hospital admissions and 0.16 (95% CI, 0.13-0.2) million ICU admissions. Our study provides insights into health preparedness to balance the disease burden and sustainability for a country with a population of billions.