2019-20 Wuhan coronavirus outbreak: Intense surveillance is vital for preventing sustained transmission in new locations
Preprint
- 25 January 2020
- preprint
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in bioRxiv
Abstract
The outbreak of pneumonia originating in Wuhan, China, has generated 830 confirmed cases, including 26 deaths, as of 24 January 2020. The virus (2019-nCoV) has spread elsewhere in China and to other countries, including South Korea, Thailand, Japan and USA. Fortunately, there has not yet been evidence of sustained human-to-human transmission outside of China. Here we assess the risk of sustained transmission whenever the coronavirus arrives in other countries. Data describing the times from symptom onset to hospitalisation for 47 patients infected in the current outbreak are used to generate an estimate for the probability that an imported case is followed by sustained human-to-human transmission. Under the assumptions that the imported case is representative of the patients in China, and that the 2019-nCoV is similarly transmissible to the SARS coronavirus, the probability that an imported case is followed by sustained human-to-human transmission is 0.37. However, if the mean time from symptom onset to hospitalisation can be halved by intense surveillance, then the probability that an imported case leads to sustained transmission is only 0.005. This emphasises the importance of current surveillance efforts in countries around the world, to ensure that the ongoing outbreak will not become a large global epidemic.All Related Versions
- Published version: Journal of Clinical Medicine, 9 (2), 498.
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Extent of Transmission of Novel Coronavirus in Wuhan, China, 2020Journal of Clinical Medicine, 2020
- New SARS-like virus in China triggers alarmScience, 2020
- The continuing 2019-nCoV epidemic threat of novel coronaviruses to global health — The latest 2019 novel coronavirus outbreak in Wuhan, ChinaInternational Journal of Infectious Diseases, 2020
- Improved inference of time-varying reproduction numbers during infectious disease outbreaksEpidemics, 2019
- Increased frequency of travel in the presence of cross-immunity may act to decrease the chance of a global pandemicPhilosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2019
- Detecting Presymptomatic Infection Is Necessary to Forecast Major Epidemics in the Earliest Stages of Infectious Disease OutbreaksPLoS Computational Biology, 2016
- Extinction thresholds in deterministic and stochastic epidemic modelsJournal of Biological Dynamics, 2012
- Stochasticity and heterogeneity in host–vector modelsJournal of The Royal Society Interface, 2007
- Global Transport Networks and Infectious Disease SpreadAdvances in Parasitology, 2006
- SARS virus identified, but the disease is still spreadingBMJ, 2003