论文标题
掩盖或不掩饰:建模公众使用面罩的潜力来减少19009年大流行
To mask or not to mask: Modeling the potential for face mask use by the general public to curtail the COVID-19 pandemic
论文作者
论文摘要
公众在限制COVID-19大流行的传播方面使用面罩的使用是有争议的,尽管越来越建议,而且这种干预的潜力尚不清楚。我们开发了一个隔间模型,用于评估一般无症状的公众使用面具的影响,其中一部分可能是无症状的感染力。模型模拟使用与美国纽约州和华盛顿州的COVID-19动力学相关的数据,这表明广泛采用相对无效的面罩可能会有意义地减少Covid-19的社区传播,并减少峰值住院和死亡。此外,面罩的使用降低了有效传输速率几乎是线性的,与掩盖有效性的产物(仅是潜在的感染性接触的一部分)和覆盖率(作为一般人群的一小部分),而对流行病学成果(死亡,住院)的影响高度非线性,表示高度非线性,表明蒙版可以与其他非虚拟化量相衡量。发现面具对于预防健康人的疾病和防止无症状传播都是有用的。假设的面具采用方案表明,在纽约,在两个月内预计死亡的17--45%的有效掩模接近普遍的(80%)的有效面膜可以阻止,同时每天的死亡率降低了34---58%,在流行病动力学中没有其他变化。我们的结果表明,公众使用面具的使用可能在减少社区传播和大流行负担方面具有很高的价值。当面罩与其他非药物实践(例如社交势力)结合使用时,社区范围的好处可能是最大的,并且当采用几乎是普遍的(全国性的)且合规性很高时。
Face mask use by the general public for limiting the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic is controversial, though increasingly recommended, and the potential of this intervention is not well understood. We develop a compartmental model for assessing the community-wide impact of mask use by the general, asymptomatic public, a portion of which may be asymptomatically infectious. Model simulations, using data relevant to COVID-19 dynamics in the US states of New York and Washington, suggest that broad adoption of even relatively ineffective face masks may meaningfully reduce community transmission of COVID-19 and decrease peak hospitalizations and deaths. Moreover, mask use decreases the effective transmission rate in nearly linear proportion to the product of mask effectiveness (as a fraction of potentially infectious contacts blocked) and coverage rate (as a fraction of the general population), while the impact on epidemiologic outcomes (death, hospitalizations) is highly nonlinear, indicating masks could synergize with other non-pharmaceutical measures. Masks are found to be useful with respect to both preventing illness in healthy persons and preventing asymptomatic transmission. Hypothetical mask adoption scenarios suggest that immediate near universal (80%) adoption of moderately (50%) effective masks could prevent on the order of 17--45% of projected deaths over two months in New York, while decreasing the peak daily death rate by 34--58%, absent other changes in epidemic dynamics. Our results suggest use of face masks by the general public is potentially of high value in curtailing community transmission and the burden of the pandemic. The community-wide benefits are likely to be greatest when face masks are used in conjunction with other non-pharmaceutical practices (such as social-distancing), and when adoption is nearly universal (nation-wide) and compliance is high.