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Modelling lockdown and exit strategies for COVID-19 in Singapore
Author(s) -
Borame Sue Lee Dickens,
Joel Ruihan Koo,
Jue Tao Lim,
Minah Park,
Sharon Esi Duoduwa Quaye,
Haoyang Sun,
Yinxiaohe Sun,
Rachael Pung,
Annelies WilderSmith,
Louis Yi Ann Chai,
Ver J. Lee,
Alex R. Cook
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the lancet regional health - western pacific
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2666-6065
DOI - 10.1016/j.lanwpc.2020.100004
Subject(s) - social distance , exit strategy , baseline (sea) , covid-19 , outbreak , isolation (microbiology) , demography , duration (music) , population , social isolation , medicine , demographic economics , environmental health , business , economics , political science , biology , virology , sociology , disease , marketing , literature , pathology , infectious disease (medical specialty) , law , art , microbiology and biotechnology , psychiatry
Background With at least 94 countries undergoing or exiting lockdowns for contact suppression to control the COVID-19 outbreak, sustainable and public health-driven exit strategies are required. Here we explore the impact of lockdown and exit strategies in Singapore for immediate planning. Methods We use an agent-based model to examine the impacts of epidemic control over 480 days. A limited control baseline of case isolation and household member quarantining is used. We measure the impact of lockdown duration and start date on final infection attack sizes. We then apply a 3-month gradual exit strategy, immediately re-opening schools and easing workplace distancing measures, and compare this to long-term social distancing measures. Findings At baseline, we estimated 815 400 total infections (21.6% of the population). Early lockdown at 5 weeks with no exit strategy averted 18 500 (2.27% of baseline averted), 21 300 (2.61%) and 22 400 (2.75%) infections for 6, 8 and 9-week lockdown durations. Using the exit strategy averted a corresponding 114 700, 121 700 and 126 000 total cases, representing 12.07–13.06% of the total epidemic size under baseline. This diminishes to 9 900–11 300 for a late 8-week start time. Long-term social distancing at 6 and 8-week durations are viable but less effective. Interpretation Gradual release exit strategies are critical to maintain epidemic suppression under a new normal. We present final infection attack sizes assuming the ongoing importation of cases, which require preparation for a potential second epidemic wave due to ongoing epidemics elsewhere. Funding Singapore Ministry of Health, Singapore Population Health Improvement Centre.

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