F1000Research (Apr 2020)

SARS-CoV-2 epidemic in India: epidemiological features and in silico analysis of the effect of interventions [version 1; peer review: 2 approved]

  • Archisman Mazumder,
  • Mehak Arora,
  • Vishwesh Bharadiya,
  • Parul Berry,
  • Mudit Agarwal,
  • Priyamadhaba Behera,
  • Hemant Deepak Shewade,
  • Ayush Lohiya,
  • Mohak Gupta,
  • Aditi Rao,
  • Giridara Gopal Parameswaran

DOI
https://doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.23496.1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Background: After SARS-CoV-2 set foot in India, the Government took a number of steps to limit the spread of the virus in the country. This included restricted testing, isolation, contact tracing and quarantine, and enforcement of a nation-wide lockdown starting 25 March 2020. The objectives of this study were to i) describe the age,gender distribution and mortality among COVID-19 patients identified till 14 April 2020 and predict the range of contact rate; and ii) predict the number of active COVID-19 patients after 40 days of lockdown. Methods: We used a cross-sectional descriptive design for first objective and a susceptible-infected-removed model for in silico predictions. We collected data from government-controlled and crowdsourced websites. Results: Studying age and gender parameters of 1161 Indian COVID-19 patients, the median age was 38 years (IQR, 27-52) with 20-39 year-old males being the most affected group. The number of affected patients were 854 (73.6%) men and 307 (26.4%) women. If the current contact rate continues (0.25-27), India may have 110460 to 220575 infected persons at the end of 40 days lockdown. Conclusion: The disease is majorly affecting a younger age group in India. Interventions have been helpful in preventing the worst-case scenario in India, but will be unable to prevent the spike in number of cases.