4.3 Article

Modelling the impact of social distancing and targeted vaccination on the spread of COVID-19 through a real city-scale contact network

Journal

JOURNAL OF COMPLEX NETWORKS
Volume 9, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/comnet/cnab042

Keywords

COVID-19 vaccination; social distancing; epidemic modeling; contact network; mobile device data

Funding

  1. RAND

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The study found that the interpersonal connectivity patterns in the city of Portland changed significantly during the COVID-19 pandemic, with a decrease in the number of individuals with many contacts as the pandemic progressed. A targeted vaccination strategy prioritizing high-contact individuals was more effective in reducing the number of cases compared to random vaccination, and combining targeted vaccination with social distancing led to the greatest reduction in cases. The marginal benefit of a targeted strategy exceeded the marginal benefit of social distancing for reducing the number of cases.
We use mobile device data to construct empirical interpersonal physical contact networks in the city of Portland, Oregon, both before and after social distancing measures were enacted during the COVID-19 pandemic. These networks reveal how social distancing measures and the public's reaction to the incipient pandemic affected the connectivity patterns within the city. We find that as the pandemic developed there was a substantial decrease in the number of individuals with many contacts. We further study the impact of these different network topologies on the spread of COVID-19 by simulating an SEIR epidemic model over these networks and find that the reduced connectivity greatly suppressed the epidemic. We then investigate how the epidemic responds when part of the population is vaccinated, and we compare two vaccination distribution strategies, both with and without social distancing. Our main result is that the heavy-tailed degree distribution of the contact networks causes a targeted vaccination strategy that prioritizes high-contact individuals to reduce the number of cases far more effectively than a strategy that vaccinates individuals at random. Combining both targeted vaccination and social distancing leads to the greatest reduction in cases, and we also find that the marginal benefit of a targeted strategy as compared to a random strategy exceeds the marginal benefit of social distancing for reducing the number of cases. These results have important implications for ongoing vaccine distribution efforts worldwide.

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