Mobility-Guided Estimation of COVID-19 Transmission Rates
Author(s) -
Dylan M. Parker,
Oleg S. Pianykh
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
american journal of epidemiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.33
H-Index - 256
eISSN - 1476-6256
pISSN - 0002-9262
DOI - 10.1093/aje/kwab001
Subject(s) - overfitting , regularization (linguistics) , transmission (telecommunications) , pandemic , econometrics , computer science , covid-19 , transmission rate , statistics , mathematical optimization , mathematics , artificial intelligence , artificial neural network , medicine , infectious disease (medical specialty) , telecommunications , disease , pathology
It is of critical importance to estimate changing disease-transmission rates and their dependence on population mobility. A common approach to this problem involves fitting daily transmission rates using a susceptible-exposed-infected-recovered-(SEIR) model (regularizing to avoid overfitting) and then computing the relationship between the estimated transmission rate and mobility. Unfortunately, there are often several very different transmission-rate trajectories that can fit the reported cases well, meaning that the choice of regularization determines the final solution (and thus the mobility–transmission rate relationship) selected by the SEIR model. Moreover, the classical approaches to regularization—penalizing the derivative of the transmission rate trajectory—do not correspond to realistic properties of pandemic spread. Consequently, models fitted using derivative-based regularization are often biased toward underestimating the current transmission rate and future deaths. In this work, we propose mobility-driven regularization of the SEIR transmission rate trajectory. This method rectifies the artificial regularization problem, produces more accurate and unbiased forecasts of future deaths, and estimates a highly interpretable relationship between mobility and the transmission rate. For this analysis, mobility data related to the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic was collected by Safegraph (San Francisco, California) from major US cities between March and August 2020.
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