49-day lockdown necessary to stop COVID-19 resurgence in India: Study


New Delhi, Mar 29 (IANS): Two Indian-origin researchers from the University of Cambridge in the UK have come up with a new mathematical model that predicts a flat 49-day nationwide lockdown -- or sustained lockdown with periodic relaxation extending over two months -- may be necessary to prevent COVID-19 resurgence in India.

The paper by Ronojoy Adhikari in collaboration with Rajesh Singh from the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics at the university shows that the 21-day lockdown that the India government has imposed is unlikely to be effective and "there will be a resurgence of COVID-19 at the end of it".

The model is possibly the first to include "age and social contact structure of the Indian population" when assessing the impact of social distancing on the COVID-19 pandemic in the country.

The paper titled ‘Age-structured impact of social distancing on the COVID-19 epidemic in India' has been published on open-access preprint repository ArXiv and is yet to be peer-reviewed.

The impact of social distancing measures -- workplace non-attendance, school closure, lockdown -- and their efficacy with duration has been investigated in the study.

The researchers used an age-structured SIR model with social contact matrices obtained from surveys and Bayesian imputation to study the progress of the COVID-19 pandemic in India.

"The structures of social contact critically determine the spread of the infection and, in the absence of vaccines, the control of these structures through large-scale social distancing measures appears to be the most effective means of mitigation," the authors wrote.

The country's total corona-affected patient count, including those who have been cured, has crossed 900 in India. The country which went in to the 21-day lockdown from March 24 midnight had 909 active cases of coronavirus as of Saturday evening. Out of them, 862 are Indians and 47 foreign nationals.

The mathematical model contains both asymptomatic and symptomatic infectives.

"Due to the paucity of data on the number of asymptomatic cases we have chosen to set these to zero. This provides a lower bound on the number of morbidities and mortalities and the intensity and duration of the social distancing measures that are required for mitigation,' the authors mentioned.

According to the authors, extensive testing of the population can provide data on the number of asymptomatic cases and this, when incorporated into the model, will provide more accurate estimates of the progress of the epidemic and the impact of mitigatory social distancing.

"More generally, there are uncertainties in all parameters of our model and these would translate into uncertainties in forecasts and estimates. These uncertainties can be reduced with better availability of case data and uncertainties can be quantified through Bayesian error propagation analysis," explained the duo.

A three-week lockdown, however, is found insufficient to prevent a resurgence and, instead, protocols of sustained lockdown with periodic relaxation are suggested.

"Our principal conclusion is that the three-week lockdown will be insufficient. Our model suggests sustained periods of lockdown with periodic relaxation will reduce the num- ber of cases to levels where individualised social contact tracing and quarantine may become feasible,: the paper elaborated.

  

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Comment on this article

  • Irineu Pereira, Mangalore

    Mon, Mar 30 2020

    There are merits and demerits in all suggestions, but it's only the herd immunity that will sustain a flat curve in any part of the world. Secondly, every society will end up doing a trade-off between containment of a generally low-mortality viral infection ( which is looking alarming only because of it's high infectivity) ; and the crushing of the economy. The result should not make it appear that the treatment is more harmful than the disease in a populous and economically much poorer country like India. More people will die of hunger and other disease ( because of poor transportation, diet and Covid-19 over-burdened healthcare .

    In India we cannot afford a lockdown beyond three weeks.After the three weeks, business and transport should resume following the necessary personal precautions and social distancing principles.

    We cannot excel in the theoretical postulates and fail in the practical exam.

    God bless.

    DisAgree Agree [1] Reply Report Abuse

  • MR VIJAYA SHETTY, MUMBAI

    Sun, Mar 29 2020

    Hot Climate is helping India to achieve a flat curve. which none of the other affected countries have the advantage. if they factor climate into the model then the result would be very deferent.

    DisAgree [5] Agree Reply Report Abuse

  • G Veer S, Nagpur

    Sun, Mar 29 2020

    Kashmir is in lock down for more than 9 months yet there are more cases of corona virus compared to rest of India. It's not enough to hold people in lock down and concentrate them in one place but subsequent frequent tests are also equally important. Looks like govt is only interested in tying down people as long as possible without realizing the consequences of crowding people in one place without medical supervision.

    DisAgree [2] Agree [11] Reply Report Abuse

  • Rudolf Rodrigues, Mumbai

    Sun, Mar 29 2020

    India is the most populous with one of the poorest population so yardsticks based on advanced countries are not applicable; one has to have a "holistic" approach considering our poverty & recessionary phase we are going through!

    DisAgree [2] Agree [9] Reply Report Abuse

  • GoingCrazy@5, Mangalore

    Sun, Mar 29 2020

    @Indian-origin researchers based in the UK - please pass your recommendation to Boris Johnson . I am sure he will be pleased to implement it in the UK maybe even for a 90 days lockdown.

    DisAgree [5] Agree [19] Reply Report Abuse

  • Nagesh, Moodbidri

    Sun, Mar 29 2020

    Enjoying their money and giving us the Gyan. This guys are planning to come back i guess because UK will be the worst hit place in Europe. I guess 80000 people are going to affected as per their news.

    DisAgree [4] Agree [13] Reply Report Abuse

  • Chiguru, Mumbai

    Sun, Mar 29 2020

    As a matter of fact, Mr Boris is himself covid positive
    UK is already implemented 6 months lockdown
    As per research done by Levitt the 80K cases and 2500 deaths data was for China that prediction was right.
    Guys dont get worked up so much.
    We all should do our best. All the researchers work with prediction models that may or may not be correct in future. It's in our hands to get covid out of our country.
    Stay home, stay safe. Enjoy with family

    DisAgree [1] Agree [7] Reply Report Abuse


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