The effectiveness of Non-Pharmaceutical Interventions in reducing the COVID-19 contagion in the UK, an observational and modelling study

Galanis, Giorgos; Di Guilmi, Corrado; Bennett, David L. and Baskozos, Giorgos. 2021. The effectiveness of Non-Pharmaceutical Interventions in reducing the COVID-19 contagion in the UK, an observational and modelling study. PLoS ONE, 16(11), e0260364. ISSN 1932-6203 [Article]

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Abstract or Description

Epidemiological models used to inform government policies aimed to reduce the contagion of COVID-19, assume that the reproduction rate is reduced through Non-Pharmaceutical Interven-tions (NPIs) leading to physical distancing. Available data in the UK show an increase in physical distancing before the NPIs were implemented and a fall soon after implementation. We aimed to estimate the effect of people’s behaviour on the epidemic curve and the effect of NPIs taking into account this behavioural component. We have estimated the effects of confirmed daily cases on physical distancing and we used this insight to design a behavioural SEIR model (BeSEIR), simu-lated different scenaria regarding NPIs and compared the results to the standard SEIR. Taking into account behavioural insights improves the description of the contagion dynamics of the epi-demic significantly. The BeSEIR predictions regarding the number of infections without NPIs were several orders of magnitude less than the SEIR. However, the BeSEIR prediction showed that early measures would still have an important influence in the reduction of infections. The BeSEIR model shows that even with no intervention the percentage of the cumulative infections within a year will not be enough for the epidemic to resolve due to a herd immunity effect. On the other hand, a standard SEIR model significantly overestimates the effectiveness of measures. Without taking into account the behavioural component, the epidemic is predicted to be resolved much sooner than when taking it into account and the effectiveness of measures are significantly overestimated.

Item Type:

Article

Identification Number (DOI):

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0260364

Departments, Centres and Research Units:

Institute of Management Studies

Dates:

DateEvent
8 November 2021Accepted
29 November 2021Published

Item ID:

30656

Date Deposited:

15 Nov 2021 14:06

Last Modified:

24 Oct 2024 16:53

Peer Reviewed:

Yes, this version has been peer-reviewed.

URI:

https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/30656

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