Should public health policy exempt cases with low viral load from isolation during an epidemic?: a modelling study
During the COVID-19 pandemic, case isolation emerged as a key non-pharmaceutical intervention in pandemic response. Its effectiveness hinges on the timing of isolation, which is often dictated by the onset of contagiousness. While minimizing isolation delays is crucial, the impact of evolving epidem...
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Zusammenfassung: | During the COVID-19 pandemic, case isolation emerged as a key
non-pharmaceutical intervention in pandemic response. Its effectiveness hinges
on the timing of isolation, which is often dictated by the onset of
contagiousness. While minimizing isolation delays is crucial, the impact of
evolving epidemic dynamics, such as changes in viral load distributions among
cases, is less understood. These dynamics could inform more efficient isolation
strategies. We developed a multi-scale agent-based model to assess isolation
policies that consider viral loads. Our model compares the outcomes of
universal isolation with strategies that exempt low viral load cases post-peak.
We found that most low viral load cases identified after the peak are less
contagious, raising the question of their need for isolation. Our analysis
reveals that exempting these individuals slightly increases new infections and,
unexpectedly, reduces efficiency, defined as infections averted per isolation.
These results advise caution with adaptive isolation policies. Our flexible
model can evaluate complex strategies, aiding future public health planning. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2412.17428 |