Publications
Unequal impact and spatial aggregation distort COVID-19 growth rates
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has posed unprecedented challenges to public health world-wide. To make decisions about mitigation strategies and to understand the disease dynamics, policy makers and epidemiologists must know how the disease is spreading in their communities. Here we analyse confirmed infections and deaths over multiple geographic scales to show that COVID-19’s impact is highly unequal: many regions have nearly zero infections, while others are hot spots. We attribute the effect to a Reed–Hughes-like mechanism in which the disease arrives to regions at different times and grows exponentially at different rates. Faster growing regions correspond to hot spots that dominate spatially aggregated statistics, thereby skewing growth rates at larger spatial scales. Finally, we use these analyses to show that, across multiple spatial scales, the growth rate of COVID-19 has slowed down with each surge …
- Date
- January 10, 2022
- Authors
- Keith Burghardt, Siyi Guo, Kristina Lerman
- Journal
- Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A
- Volume
- 380
- Issue
- 2214
- Pages
- 20210122
- Publisher
- The Royal Society