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Travel restrictions are most useful in early and late phase of an epidemic

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London: After studying the spread of coronavirus from China to other parts of the world, researchers suggest that travel advisories are most useful in the early and the late phase of an epidemic. 

Analysis of human mobility and epidemiological data by a global consortium of researchers, led by the University of Oxford and Northeastern University, shows that human mobility was predictive of the spread of the epidemic in China.

Restrictions of travel from Wuhan, unfortunately, came too late and research showed that the impact of travel restrictions declines as the epidemic grows.

Provinces outside Hubei that acted early to test, track and contain imported COVID-19 cases fared the best at preventing or containing local outbreaks.

Mobile geolocation data from Baidu Inc, combined with a rich epidemiological dataset from the Open COVID-19 Data Working Group, showed that local person-to-person transmission happened extensively early on in the coronavirus outbreak and was mitigated by drastic control measures.

However, with an average incubation period of 5 days, and up to 14 days in some cases, these mobility restrictions did not begin to positively impact the data on new cases for over a week — with things appearing to get worse in the 5-7 days immediately after the lockdown as the local transmission was well underway.

Among cases reported outside Hubei, 515 cases had a known travel history to Wuhan and a symptom onset date before January 31, 2020, as compared with only 39 after January 31, illustrating the effect of travel restrictions in decreasing the spread to other Chinese provinces.

“Our findings show that early in the coronavirus outbreak travel restrictions were effective in preventing the import of infections from a known source,” said Dr Moritz Kraemer from the Oxford Martin Programme on Pandemic Genomics and the Department of Zoology at the University of Oxford.

“However, once COVID-19 cases begin spreading locally the contribution of new importations was much smaller. This is where a full package of measures including local mobility restrictions, testing, tracing and isolation need to work together to mitigate the epidemic,” Kraemer added.

“Chinese provinces and other countries that have successfully halted internal transmission of COVID-19 need to consider carefully how they will manage to reinstate travel and mobility to avoid the reintroduction and spread of the disease in their populations,” said Kraemer.

Prof Samuel V Scarpino of Network Science Institute (NetSI) at Northeastern University said: “The political will in many countries is lagging behind the spread of COVID-19.”
“Travel and mobility restrictions are the most useful right at the start, when local transmission has not yet become a factor. After the transmission is established, physical distancing and the quarantine of sick individuals will work, but it takes time,” added Prof Scarpino. (ANI)

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