PLoS Medicine (Aug 2020)

Social distancing to slow the US COVID-19 epidemic: Longitudinal pretest-posttest comparison group study.

  • Mark J Siedner,
  • Guy Harling,
  • Zahra Reynolds,
  • Rebecca F Gilbert,
  • Sebastien Haneuse,
  • Atheendar S Venkataramani,
  • Alexander C Tsai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003244
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 8
p. e1003244

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundSocial distancing measures to address the US coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) epidemic may have notable health and social impacts.Methods and findingsWe conducted a longitudinal pretest-posttest comparison group study to estimate the change in COVID-19 case growth before versus after implementation of statewide social distancing measures in the US. The primary exposure was time before (14 days prior to, and through 3 days after) versus after (beginning 4 days after, to up to 21 days after) implementation of the first statewide social distancing measures. Statewide restrictions on internal movement were examined as a secondary exposure. The primary outcome was the COVID-19 case growth rate. The secondary outcome was the COVID-19-attributed mortality growth rate. All states initiated social distancing measures between March 10 and March 25, 2020. The mean daily COVID-19 case growth rate decreased beginning 4 days after implementation of the first statewide social distancing measures, by 0.9% per day (95% CI -1.4% to -0.4%; P ConclusionsStatewide social distancing measures were associated with a decrease in the COVID-19 case growth rate that was statistically significant. Statewide social distancing measures were also associated with a decrease in the COVID-19-attributed mortality growth rate beginning 7 days after implementation, although this decrease was no longer statistically significant by 10 days.