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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/26531
Title: The time scale of asymptomatic transmission affects estimates of epidemic potential in the COVID-19 outbreak
Authors: Park SW
Cornforth DM
Dushoff J
Weitz JS
Keywords: Asymptomatic transmission;Basic reproduction number;COVID-19;Coronavirus disease;SARS-CoV-2;Asymptomatic Diseases;Basic Reproduction Number;COVID-19;Coronavirus Infections;Disease Outbreaks;Epidemics;Humans;Pandemics;Pneumonia, Viral
Publication Date: Jun-2020
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Abstract: The role of asymptomatic carriers in transmission poses challenges for control of the COVID-19 pandemic. Study of asymptomatic transmission and implications for surveillance and disease burden are ongoing, but there has been little study of the implications of asymptomatic transmission on dynamics of disease. We use a mathematical framework to evaluate expected effects of asymptomatic transmission on the basic reproduction number R0 (i.e., the expected number of secondary cases generated by an average primary case in a fully susceptible population) and the fraction of new secondary cases attributable to asymptomatic individuals. If the generation-interval distribution of asymptomatic transmission differs from that of symptomatic transmission, then estimates of the basic reproduction number which do not explicitly account for asymptomatic cases may be systematically biased. Specifically, if asymptomatic cases have a shorter generation interval than symptomatic cases, R0 will be over-estimated, and if they have a longer generation interval, R0 will be under-estimated. Estimates of the realized proportion of asymptomatic transmission during the exponential phase also depend on asymptomatic generation intervals. Our analysis shows that understanding the temporal course of asymptomatic transmission can be important for assessing the importance of this route of transmission, and for disease dynamics. This provides an additional motivation for investigating both the importance and relative duration of asymptomatic transmission.
metadata.dc.rights.license: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs - CC BY-NC-ND
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/26531
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epidem.2020.100392
ISSN: 1755-4365
1878-0067
Appears in Collections:Faculty Publications (via McMaster Experts)

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