Dynamical clustering of U.S. states reveals four distinct infection patterns that predict SARS-CoV-2 pandemic behavior
The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has so far unfolded diversely across the fifty United States of America, reflected both in different time progressions of infection "waves" and in magnitudes of local infection rates. Despite a marked diversity of presentations, most U.S. states experienced their si...
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Zusammenfassung: | The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has so far unfolded diversely across the fifty United
States of America, reflected both in different time progressions of infection
"waves" and in magnitudes of local infection rates. Despite a marked diversity
of presentations, most U.S. states experienced their single greatest surge in
daily new cases during the transition from Fall 2020 to Winter 2021. Popular
media also cite additional similarities between states -- often despite
disparities in governmental policies, reported mask-wearing compliance rates,
and vaccination percentages. Here, we identify a set of robust, low-dimensional
clusters that 1) summarize the timings and relative heights of four historical
COVID-19 "wave opportunities" accessible to all 50 U.S. states, 2) correlate
with geographical and intervention patterns associated with those groups of
states they encompass, and 3) predict aspects of the "fifth wave" of new
infections in the late Summer of 2021. In particular, we argue that clustering
elucidates a negative relationship between vaccination rates and subsequent
case-load variabilities within state groups. We advance the hypothesis that
vaccination acts as a ``seat belt," in effect constraining the likely range of
new-case upticks, even in the context of the Summer 2021, variant-driven surge. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2112.05782 |