Nowcasting transmission and suppression of the Delta variant of SARS-CoV-2 in Australia

07/14/2021
by   Sheryl L. Chang, et al.
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An outbreak of the Delta (B.1.617.2) variant of SARS-CoV-2 that began around mid-June 2021 in Sydney, Australia, quickly developed into a nation-wide epidemic. The ongoing epidemic is of major concern as the Delta variant is more infectious than previous variants that circulated in Australia in 2020. Using a re-calibrated agent-based model, we explored a feasible range of non-pharmaceutical interventions, including case isolation, home quarantine, school closures, and stay-at-home restrictions (i.e., "social distancing"). Our nowcasting modelling indicated that the levels of reduced interactions in workplaces and across communities attained in Sydney and other parts of the nation were inadequate for controlling the outbreak. A counter-factual analysis suggested that if 70 restrictions, then at least 45 days are needed for new daily cases to fall from their peak to below ten per day. Our model successfully predicted that, under a progressive vaccination rollout, if 40-50 stay-at-home restrictions, the incidence will stabilise by mid-October 2021. We also quantified an expected burden on the healthcare system and potential fatalities across Australia.

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