Infectious disease researchers at The University of Texas at Austin
and other institutions in Hong Kong, mainland China and France have
concluded there is a high probability that the deadly Wuhan coronavirus
spread beyond Wuhan and other quarantined cities before Chinese
officials were able to put a quarantine in place. At least 128 cities in
China outside of the quarantine zone, including cities with no reported
cases to date, had a greater than even risk of exposure, according to a
paper currently in press with Emerging Infectious Diseases, a journal of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Based on comprehensive travel data from location-based services and
modeling of the disease done at UT Austin’s Texas Advanced Computing
Center, 128 cities in China had a 50% chance or greater risk that
someone exposed to the virus traveled there before the quarantine began.
The team also estimated there were 11,213 cases of the coronavirus in
Wuhan by the time of the quarantine on Jan. 22—a rate 10 times higher
than the reported cases.
“This risk assessment identified several cities throughout China
likely to be harboring yet undetected cases of [Wuhan coronavirus] and
suggests that early 2020 ground and rail travel seeded cases far beyond the Wuhan region quarantine,” write the authors.
As of Feb. 4, officials have confirmed 425 fatalities from the virus,
all but two in mainland China, and more than 20,000 confirmed cases
spread across the world.
The paper shows there is a 99% chance that at least one patient
carrying the virus traveled to the cities of Beijing, Guangzhou,
Shenzhen and Shanghai by the time the quarantine was put in place for
the city
of Wuhan on Jan. 23. The quarantine has since expanded to include
cities with populations totaling 60 million people. Beijing reported its
first fatality from the virus on Jan. 27.
The team estimated new cases of the virus doubled roughly every week,
and on average, that every infected person transmitted the disease to
approximately two other people.
Lauren Ancel Meyers, a mathematical epidemiologist and professor of
integrative biology and statistics and data sciences at UT Austin; and
Zhanwei Du, a computer scientist working at UT Austin, along with a team
of scientists from France, China and Hong Kong, used historical travel
data for the busy Spring Festival season to chart human movements
between 371 cities in China. The team used road, train and air travel
data to yield results more accurate than those of other models.
“Given that 98% of all trips during this period are taken by train or
car, our analysis of air, rail and road travel data yields more
granular risk estimates than possible with air passenger data alone,”
said Meyers, who specializes in modeling the spread of infectious diseases.
“The quarantine will probably prevent future transmission out of Wuhan.
However, introductions of the novel coronavirus had already occurred
throughout China and the world by the time the quarantine started.”
The model also takes into account the reported cases of the disease outside of China to estimate the rates of epidemic growth.
Based on the team’s estimates, there are at least 128 cities and as
many as 186 cities in China that had at least a 50% chance of an
infected visitor from Wuhan arriving sometime in the three weeks before
the quarantine was enacted. Several cities reporting no cases had a 99%
probability that an infected person visited. Those cities—each with a
population of more than 2 million people—include Fushun, Laibin and
Chuxiong.
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-02-early-coronavirus-china-quarantine-zone.html
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