Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-g8jcs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-23T22:29:45.011Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Measures to prevent nosocomial transmissions of COVID-19 based on interpersonal contact data

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 January 2022

Tao Cheng*
Affiliation:
SpaceTimeLab, University College London, London, UK
Jiaxing Liu
Affiliation:
SpaceTimeLab, University College London, London, UK
Yunzhe Liu
Affiliation:
SpaceTimeLab, University College London, London, UK
Xianghui Zhang
Affiliation:
SpaceTimeLab, University College London, London, UK
Xiaowei Gao
Affiliation:
SpaceTimeLab, University College London, London, UK
*
Author for correspondence: Dr Tao Cheng, SpaceTimeLab, University College London, London WC1E 6BT, UK. E-mail: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Background:

With the global spreading of Coronavirus disease (COVID-19), many primary care medical workers have been infected, particularly in the early stages of this pandemic. Although extensive studies have explored the COVID-19 transmission patterns and (non-) pharmaceutical intervention to protect the general public, limited research has analysed the measures to prevent nosocomial transmission based upon detailed interpersonal contacts between medical staff and patients.

Aim:

This paper aims to develop and evaluate proactive prevention measures to contain the nosocomial transmission of COVID-19. The specific objectives are (1) to understand the virus transmission via interpersonal contacts among medical staff and patients; (2) to define proactive measures to reduce the risk of infection of medical staff and (3) evaluate the effectiveness of these measures to control the COVID-19 epidemic in hospitals.

Methods:

We observed the operation of a typical primary hospital in China to understand the interpersonal contacts among medical staff and patients. We defined effective distance as the indicator for risk of transmission. Then three proactive measures were proposed based upon the observations, including a medical staff rotation system, the establishment of a separate fever clinic and medical staff working alone. Finally, the impacts of these measures are evaluated with a modified Susceptible-Exposure-Infected-Removed model accommodating the situation of hospitals and asymptomatic and latent infection of COVID-19. The case study was conducted with the hospital observed in December 2019 and February 2020.

Findings:

The implementation of the medical staff rotation system has the most significant impact on containing the epidemic. The establishment of a separate fever clinic and medical staff working alone also benefits from inhibiting the epidemic outbreak. The simulation finds that if effective prevention and control measures are not taken in time, it will lead to a surge of infection cases in all asymptomatic probabilities and incubation periods.

Type
Research
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press

Introduction

The world has been experiencing an unprecedented public health emergency, a pneumonia pandemic caused by the novel severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), that is, the Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) (WHO, 2020c). This infectious disease spreads rapidly within a brief period of time to more than 190 countries or regions worldwide, resulting in acute morbidities and mortalities. As of the time of writing, there have been more than 160 million confirmed cases and over three million deaths globally (JHCRC, 2020).

The group of medical staff is a crucial point during every pandemic time (Ives et al., Reference Ives, Greenfield, Parry, Draper, Gratus, Petts, Sorell and Wilson2009). In the context of combating the ongoing pandemic, the front-line staff build a direct relationship with infected patients (Nguyen et al., Reference Nguyen, Drew, Graham, Joshi, Guo, Ma, Mehta, Warner, Sikavi, Lo, Kwon, Song, Mucci, Stampfer, Willett, Eliassen, Hart, Chavarro and Rich-Edwards2020). With the typical person-to-person transmission characteristic of COVID-19, the medical staff is more eligible to be infected or even to be an asymptomatic individual (Adams & Walls, Reference Adams and Walls2020; Bai et al., Reference Bai, Yao, Wei, Tian, Jin, Chen and Wang2020).

Many international studies and reports have pointed out that, in similar settings, the nosocomial transmissions among the medical staff are not unusual (Beijing Daily Client, 2020; Chang et al., Reference Chang, Xu, Rebaza, Sharma and Dela Cruz2020; North Evening New Vision Network, 2020a; 2020b; People’s Network, 2020; Reference News, 2020; Zhou et al., Reference Zhou, Li, Lu, Ma, Pan, Liu, Zhu, Hu, Wu, Chen, Wang, Wei, Li, Xu, Wang and Cai2020). This is because doctors and patients in the community services centres and hospitals gather in a limited space. In emergency cases, the group gathered in the limited space is more likely to be infected with infectious diseases and cross infection (Yin, Reference Yin2020).

Based on a traditional Systems Engineering Initiative for Patient Safety model, Gan et al. (Reference Gan, Lim and Koh2020) have tentatively studied the theoretical prevention to protect the health care workers from being transmitted COVID-19 in the workplace. Harrison et al. (Reference Harrison, Muradali, El Sahly, Bozkurt and Jneid2020) have stated that the infectious possibilities within the hospital are highly possible with 2.5% proportions to the whole infected cases by the data of independent search from current works of literature, while Long et al. (Reference Long, Tang, Shi, Li, Deng, Yuan, Hu, Xu, Zhang, Lv, Su, Zhang, Gong, Wu, Liu, Li, Qiu, Chen and Huang2020) have showed that typically the asymptomatic cases are common and have higher virus levels. Studies have also shown that different types of medical personnel may contribute to different degrees of infectious possibilities. Particularly, if the staff has received the pre-training course on self-protection, they could have a bit lower infected rates (P < 0.05) (Zhou et al., Reference Zhou, Li, Lu, Ma, Pan, Liu, Zhu, Hu, Wu, Chen, Wang, Wei, Li, Xu, Wang and Cai2020).

It is evident from the literature that the COVID-19 has infected a considerable number of medical personnel through nosocomial transmission. It is also noticeable that the infection of medical workers mainly occurred in the early stage of the epidemic when anti-epidemic measures and policies were not introduced. Recent evidence has approved that subclinical patients (i.e., infected persons with pre-symptomatic or asymptomatic cases of COVID-19) can be contagious and transmit the virus efficiently (Chang et al., Reference Chang, Xu, Rebaza, Sharma and Dela Cruz2020; WHO, 2020a). These findings suggest that it is insufficient that only adopt the conventional personal measures of protection to ensure the safety of the medical staff during this ongoing pandemic, such as wearing regular face masks, goggles and protective gowns. Given that medical staff may also be a dangerous transmitter among the whole pandemic to their family or community, proactive measures should be taken to reduce the nosocomial transmission among staff members.

Although there are many epidemic studies on COVID-19 spread patterns and the infection of medical staff (Fauver et al., Reference Fauver, Petrone, Hodcroft, Shioda, Ehrlich, Watts, Vogels, Brito, Alpert, Muyombwe, Razeq, Downing, Cheemarla, Wyllie, Kalinich, Ott, Quick, Loman, Neugebauer, Greninger, Jerome, Roychoudhury, Xie, Shrestha, Huang, Pitzer, Iwasaki, Omer, Khan, Bogoch, Martinello, Foxman, Landry, Neher, Ko and Grubaugh2020; Kamel Boulos & Geraghty, Reference Kamel Boulos and Geraghty2020; Prem et al., Reference Prem, Liu, Russell, Kucharski, Eggo, Davies, Flasche, Clifford, Pearson, Munday, Abbott, Gibbs, Rosello, Quilty, Jombart, Sun, Diamond, Gimma and van Zandvoort2020; Sotgiu et al., Reference Sotgiu, Barassi, Miozzo, Saderi, Piana, Orfeo, Colosio, Felisati, Davì, Gerli and Centanni2020; Zu et al., Reference Zu, Li, Li, Shen, Xiao and Ji2020), few studies have conducted detailed spatiotemporal analysis regarding the virus spread dynamics within the hospital with the interpersonal data so that the effective control measures could be implemented in practice. This paper addresses this gap by analysing the interpersonal data and the outbreak situation in hospitals so that effective non-pharmaceutical measures and policies could be identified to prevent the nosocomial transmissions of COVID-19.

The paper is organised as follows. The next section introduces the interpersonal data used for the case study in detail, describing the process of data acquisition of medical staff during the pandemic period. The third section presents the methodology. It first defines the concept and method of effective distance which is developed to quantify the transmission rate based upon interpersonal contacts among individuals in the hospital. It then revises a Susceptible-Exposure-Infected-Removed (SEIR) model to accommodate the hospital situation with in and out population, and the asymptomatic and latent infections of COVID-19. The proactive control measures are drawn from the observation of the operation of the case study hospital to minimise the contacts among individuals. The fourth section demonstrates the influence of the proactive control measures on epidemic transmission using the revised SEIR model. In particular, it discusses the impacts of the asymptomatic and latent infection in the epidemic situation. The fifth section summarises the major findings with policy suggestions, in consistency to the latest (WHO, 2020b) on protecting the safety of medical staff. This section also describes the limitations and future work of our research.

Data description

The interpersonal contact data were extracted from a Primary general hospital located in a medium size in Hebei province, China. According to the scale of the hospital and its ability to provide medical care, hospitals in China are organised by a three-tier hierarchical system, comprising Primary, Secondary, and Tertiary institutions (Li et al., Reference Li, Huang and Zhang2008). Most hospitals in towns are classified as Primary, which is the fundamental choice for most residents to diagnose their medical condition without an emergency. In 2018, there were nearly 8000 Primary general hospitals in China, accounting for 40.55% of the total number of general hospitals. Given the wide geographical distribution and the large number of hospitals, the selection of such a Primary hospital is accordingly representative for China.

The interpersonal contact data were derived from a field survey and the internal recording system of the hospital in December 2019 and February 2020, which captured the contacts between medical staff and patients in both inpatient and outpatient departments, without considering interpersonal contacts among admin staff. After interviewing staff members, we noticed that the staff from different medical departments contact each other two to five times per day. The specific data collection processes are summarised as follows:

  • Inpatient Department: the daily contact times between nurses and inpatients and the times of doctor rounds (which can be regarded as the contact times with nurses and patients) are highly regular. This is because the number of times nurses care for inpatients is fixed unless there is an emergency, but this kind of contingency will not affect the results of the study. Therefore, through field investigation, the number of daily interpersonal contacts of medical staff in the inpatient department can be obtained (Table 1).

    Table 1. Interpersonal contact data in the inpatient department in December

For outpatient, they are four departments that interact with patients as follows:

  • Internal Medicine Clinic: there are 10 medical staff members working in the same office. After investigation, we found that the doctor would contact each patient twice in a consultation. This is because the doctor will first examine the patient then meet the same patient after laboratory testing. Therefore, the medical outpatient’s visit data multiplied by two represent the daily contact times of the medical outpatient doctor with the patients.

  • Surgical Clinic: There are five medical staff members in the same office. Similar to the medical clinic, a patient needs to contact the surgical doctor twice in a consultation. Therefore, the number of times the medical staff in the surgical department contact the patient can be calculated from multiplying the number of consultations by 2.

  • Laboratory: There are eight staff members in the laboratory section of the hospital. They are separated into two offices, respectively in charge of blood tests and routine urine tests. Every time a patient comes for a test, s/he will contact all the staff members in one test office. Therefore, every patient test here is recorded as one contact with all the staff members in the office of the test.

  • Pharmacy: There are seven staff members in the hospital pharmacy. According to the duty schedule, while the four staff members are working, the rest of three are resting, plus one staff member is rotated every day. Therefore, four pharmacy members work in the pharmacy at the same time, so each patient will contact each staff member when taking medicine.

The interpersonal contact data between medical staff members with the outpatients are shown in Tables 2 and 3, in December 2019 and February 2020, respectively.

Table 2. Example of contact data between outpatient medical staff and patients in December

Table 3. Example of contact data between outpatient medical staff and patients in February

Figure 1 contains daily patients’ data in December 2019 and February 2020. The higher number in December shows that the hospital operated normally in December because the outbreak has not yet exploded. After the pandemic was officially reported in late January, the number of patients decreased considerably.

Figure 1. Comparison of the number of patients in the hospital before (i.e., December 2019) and after (i.e., February 2020) the COVID-19 outbreak.

Methodology

Based upon the scenarios of the hospital operation presented in the “Data description” section, we developed three steps to conduct the research. First, we define the rate of virus transmission between individuals based upon their interpersonal contacts in the hospital. Then the possible prevention measures are proposed to minimise the contacts between individuals, in order to reduce the transmission. Finally, an improved SEIR model is proposed to simulate the effectiveness of the prevention and control measures. This improved SEIR model is modified to accommodate the hospital situations and the asymptotic and latency specific to COVID-19.

Rate of transmission based on effective distance

Since COVID-19 is mainly spread from person to person, the nosocomial transmission somehow depends on the distance or frequency between patients and the medical staff members. Effective distance has been proposed to describe the chance of disease transmission between individuals (Deutsch & Isard, Reference Deutsch and Isard2007). The effectiveness of this measurement method has been verified on the actual data of H1N1 and SARS-CoV-2 transmission (Asai & Nishiura, Reference Asai and Nishiura2018; Shi et al., Reference Shi, Tanaka, Ueno, Gilmour, Tanoue, Kawashima, Nomura, Eguchi, Miyata and Yoneoka2020). Therefore, we use effective distance to measure the chance of COVID-19 transmission between patients with medical staff.

The equation (Eq. 1) of effective distance is defined as below:

(1) $${{P_{mn}} = {{{I_{mn}}} \over {{G_m}}}}$$

where ${P_{mn}}$ represents the contact probability between two individuals m and n. I mn represents the number of contacts between two individuals m and n in the hospital setting. ${G_m}\;$ represents the sum of the number of contacts between the individual m and all the other individuals.

Because the logarithm is additive, the logarithm of the obtained contact probability ${P_{mn}}\;$ is taken. Finally, the effective distance ${d_{mn}}$ is obtained as follows (Eq. 2):

(2) $${{d_{mn}} = 1 - log{P_{mn}}}$$

Protective measures for medical staff

COVID-19 virus is more likely to spread among the two individuals who have frequent contacts and long contact. Given that we do not have the information of the time of the contact, we focus on the contact frequencies. To reduce the speed and scale of virus transmission, it is necessary to reduce the number of contacts between individuals in hospitals. Although other measures could be implemented, here we propose the followings given these measures can keep the hospital running at maximal capacity:

  • Medical staff works alone: When the number of symptomatic individuals in the hospital reaches a fixed threshold, establish a separate working space in the hospital, let the medical staff abide by the policy, stick to their posts, work independently and reduce contact with each other.

  • Establishment of a separate fever clinic: When the number of symptomatic individuals in the hospital reaches a fixed threshold, a separate fever clinic was established to treat patients with fever symptoms. The fever clinic was completely isolated from other outpatient departments.

  • Adopt a rotation system of medical staff: When the number of symptomatic individuals in the hospital reaches a fixed threshold, the medical staff are divided into two groups. Each group worked continuously for 14 days and was isolated for 14 days. During the 14 days of isolation, the other group stuck to their posts.

All of the measures described above depend on one parameter, that is, the number of people with symptoms in the hospital reaches a fixed threshold, and the trigger threshold of the measures and policies considered in this paper is 1. For example, if the threshold value is 1, when the number of symptomatic individuals in any department or patient is greater than 1, the above measures and policies will be adopted.

Because the hospital is different from other infrastructure, it cannot be closed during the epidemic period, so patients will come to see a doctor and consult every day. According to all the prevention and control measures and policies, there are patients entering the hospital every day, and there are also patients discharged from the inpatient department after rehabilitation.

The modified SEIR model

Susceptible-Infected-Removed (SIR) model has been widely used for prediction and the estimation of epidemiological parameters. SEIR model is an extension to SIR by adding exposed population, which has been widely used in the modelling of SARS, Ebola and other epidemics (Dye & Gay, Reference Dye and Gay2003; Rachah & Torres, Reference Rachah and Torres2017). The SEIR model has excellent performance for characterising the epidemic dynamic and predicting possible contagion scenarios. In the recent studies on the COVID-19 pandemic, SEIR and its derivative model have been widely employed to assess the effectiveness of various non-pharmaceutical measures, such as lock-down and quarantine (Yi et al., Reference Yi, Zhang, Mao, Yang and Li2009), predict epidemic evolution (Yang et al., Reference Yang, Zeng, Wang, Wong, Liang, Zanin, Liu, Cao, Gao, Mai, Liang, Liu, Li, Li, Ye, Guan, Yang, Li, Luo, Xie, Liu, Wang, Zhang, Wang, Zhong and He2020) and evaluate management strategies (R&acaron;dulescu et al., Reference R&acaron;dulescu, Williams and Cavanagh2020) by combining with some statistical (Pandey et al., Reference Pandey, Chaudhary, Gupta and Pal2020), AI (Yang et al., Reference Yang, Zeng, Wang, Wong, Liang, Zanin, Liu, Cao, Gao, Mai, Liang, Liu, Li, Li, Ye, Guan, Yang, Li, Luo, Xie, Liu, Wang, Zhang, Wang, Zhong and He2020) and simulation models (Annas et al., Reference Annas, Isbar Pratama, Rifandi, Sanusi and Side2020).

Yang et al. (Reference Yang, Zeng, Wang, Wong, Liang, Zanin, Liu, Cao, Gao, Mai, Liang, Liu, Li, Li, Ye, Guan, Yang, Li, Luo, Xie, Liu, Wang, Zhang, Wang, Zhong and He2020) have accurately predicted that the COVID-19 epidemic in China will reach its peak in late February 2020 and tend to be flat at the end of April using a modified SEIR model. They revised the SEIR model to accommodate the dynamic population of a province to simulate the transmission in China by adding immigrants and emigrants to the susceptible population. Inspired by their work, here we further improve their SEIR model as follows to accommodate the situation in hospitals:

  • In and Outpatients: Because the number of patients who come to the hospital every day is not fixed, and there are patients discharged every day, it is necessary to add the number of daily visits and discharge into the model to dynamically show the changing state of susceptible population [S]. Therefore, we divide the changing susceptible population of the hospital as In (visitor) and Out (leave), represented as ${S_{in/out}}\left[ t \right]$ . So are the numbers of the exposed population, represented as ${E_{in/out}}\left[ t \right]$ .

  • Latency: We separate the number of latent and sick persons with different probabilities of infecting susceptible persons and exposed persons, which will be used to simulate the epidemic prevention situation in the hospital after the introduction of epidemic prevention measures (the sick will be isolated).

  • Asymptomatic: Exposed population (E) could become symptomatic or asymptomatic (A) patients, with rates, ${\sigma _{\;1\;}}\;$ and ${\sigma _2}\;$ , respectively. Symptomatic patients will be classified as infected (I) and will be isolated without further infection to others. We separate the asymptomatic patients from the (I) due to the fact that asymptomatic patients are not easily identifiable who will keep on infecting others (given they show no symptom) until they recover. This is different from Yang et al. (Reference Yang, Zeng, Wang, Wong, Liang, Zanin, Liu, Cao, Gao, Mai, Liang, Liu, Li, Li, Ye, Guan, Yang, Li, Luo, Xie, Liu, Wang, Zhang, Wang, Zhong and He2020).

  • Incubation: Furthermore, the incubation period will be added to the model with a median of 7 days in latency as analysed by Dietz (Reference Dietz, Anderson and May1992). If the incubation period is infectious, the asymptomatic population (A) will continue to affect the exposed (E) population with a rate $\theta $ .

Our improved SEIR model is shown in Figure 2.

Figure 2. Improved SEIR model

The formula of the improved SEIR model is as follows:

(3) \begin{align*}S\left[ {t + 1} \right] & = S\left[ t \right] + \;{S_{in}}\left[ t \right] - \;{S_{out}}\left[ t \right] - \;{{{\beta _1}\times{r_1}\left[ t \right]\times I\left[ t \right]\times S\left[ t \right]} \over {N\left[ t \right]}} \\ & - \;{{{\beta _2}\times {r_2}\left[ t \right]\times I\left[ t \right]\times S\left[ t \right]} \over {N\left[ t \right]}} \end{align*}
(4) \begin{align*}E\left[ {t + 1} \right] & = E\left[ t \right] + \;{E_{in}}\left[ t \right] - \;{E_{out}}\left[ t \right] + \;{{{\beta _1}\times {r_1}\left[ t \right]\times I\left[ t \right]\times S\left[ t \right]} \over {N\left[ t \right]}} \\ & + \;{{{\beta _2}\times {r_2}\left[ t \right]\times I\left[ t \right]\times S\left[ t \right]} \over {N\left[ t \right]}} - \;{\sigma _1}E\left( t \right) + {\sigma _2}E\left( t \right)\theta \end{align*}
(5) $$I\left[ {t + 1} \right] = \;{\sigma _1}E\left( t \right) + {\sigma _2}E\left( t \right) + I\left[ t \right] - \;\;\gamma I\left[ t \right]$$
(6) $$R\left[ {t + 1} \right] = \;\gamma I\left[ t \right] + R\left[ t \right]$$
(7) $${S_{in}}\left[ t \right] = \;In\left[ t \right]\,\times\left( {1 - \;P\left[ t \right]} \right)$$
(8) $${S_{out}}\left[ t \right] = \;Out\left[ t \right]\,\times\left( {1 - \;P\left[ t \right]} \right)$$
(9) $${E_{in}}\left[ t \right] = {\rm{\;}}In\left[ t \right]\ {\rm{\times\;}}P\left[ t \right]$$
(10) $${E_{out}}\left[ t \right] = {\rm{\;}}Out\left[ t \right]\ {\rm{\times\;}}P\left[ t \right]$$

where $\;{\beta _1}$ is the infection rate of the susceptible population; ${\beta _2}$ is the infection rate of the susceptible population by exposed persons; r 1 is the daily average number of people exposed to infection and r 2 is the average number of exposed people; P[t] is the probability of exposure among In and Out population, which is calculated based upon the effective distance as defined above; ${\sigma _1}\;$ is the probability that exposed population convert into symptomatic infection; ${\sigma _2}\;$ is the probability that the exposed population convert into asymptomatic infection; $\theta \;$ is the probability that asymptomatic infection converts into the exposed group. ${\rm{\gamma }}$ is the probability of infected convert into recovery (R).

In order to apply the SEIR model, it is necessary to estimate the parameter β, which is the product of the number of daily contacts (r) and the probability of infection (b). According to the data collected in the hospital in our case, the average daily contact number of infected persons is consistent with that of exposed persons, that is, r 1 = r 2 = 14. According to the literature (Yang et al., Reference Yang, Zeng, Wang, Wong, Liang, Zanin, Liu, Cao, Gao, Mai, Liang, Liu, Li, Li, Ye, Guan, Yang, Li, Luo, Xie, Liu, Wang, Zhang, Wang, Zhong and He2020), b = 0.0529. Therefore, ${\beta _1}$ = ${\beta _2}$ = b * r = 0.7406 in our case study when no control measures are implemented (see the “Effective distance of medical staff” section). However, when different response measures are taken, the number of daily contacts corresponding to different groups will change in varying degrees, as the embodiment of the measures taken (see “Influence of three prevention and control measures on hospital epidemic” section).

Results

Effective distance of medical staff

Based upon the interpersonal contact data collected in Tables 13, the effective distance ${d_{mn}}$ among the medical staff members and the patients is calculated as a pairwise distance matrix D. A heatmap is generated based on the matrix D (Figure 3), showing the pairwise effective distance between all medical staff. In Figure 3, the medical staff were categorised based on their department, and the patients are regarded as a whole and placed in the last part of the matrix as this paper is intended to solve the safety problem of medical staff.

Figure 3. Calculated effective distance between individuals in the hospital

As can be seen from Figure 3, the effective distance of medical staff in the internal medicine outpatient department, surgical outpatient department, laboratory, pharmacy and inpatient department is relatively short, which indicates that the internal staff of the department have more contact times; although the laboratory is divided into two offices of blood routine and urine test, the effective distance between the two offices is also short, indicating that the personal contact between the offices is also more frequent. In contact with the patients, the number of pharmacy staff is more, followed by internal medicine and surgical outpatient. Because of the short effective distance between the outpatient department and the medical ward, the medical staff often needs to check. Generally, the greater the effective distance between the different departments, the fewer connections they have and lower rate of transmission.

Influence of three prevention and control measures on hospital epidemic

Here we present the simulation results using the improved SEIR model to evaluate the effectiveness of the protective measures for medical staff proposed in the “Protective measures for medical staff” section, including medical staff works alone, establishment of a separate fever clinic and adopt a rotation system of medical staff. The impacts of asymptomatic infected persons (A) will be further explored in the “Influence of asymptomatic probability on epidemic transmission”. The “Influence of latent period infectivity on epidemic transmission” section investigates the impact of the latent period infectivity on epidemic transmission.

Since the outbreak of the epidemic has not yet occurred in December 2019, the model based on the data at this time can better reflect the real situation of the outbreak in the hospital. Therefore, the hospital contact data and admission data in December 2019 are selected for simulation. In the analysis, the change of infected individuals and the median of latecomers were considered in the analysis. Day 0 represents the first day. Figure 4 shows the outbreak of the epidemic in the hospital from 0 to 32 days without any prevention and control measures and policies.

Figure 4. Simulation of hospital outbreak without any measures and policies

After the outbreak of the epidemic, the number of susceptible persons dropped sharply before the 20th day. During this period, the infection rate was significantly higher than the cure rate. On the 22nd, the epidemic broke out to the highest point, about 35 people were ill. As there were almost no susceptible individuals on the 20th, the number of infected individuals began to decline. The number of infected and cured patients was the same around the 21st day, it was not until the 25th that the epidemic was brought under control.

Figure 5a, 5b and 5c, respectively, shows the impact of three measures and policies on the epidemic situation, including allowing medical staff to work alone, establishing a separate fever clinic and applying the rotation system of medical staff. These diagrams demonstrate that the three measures can effectively prevent and control disease transmission. Among them, the medical staff working alone and establishing a separate fever clinic can effectively control the whole process. The peak number of infected people is less than 15, and the days reaching the peak are about 23 days. The medical staff rotation system, however, is most effective for the epidemic prevention and control, with eight infected persons as the peak number.

Figure 5. Simulation of the outbreak in the hospital after the implementation of relevant measures: (a) medical staff works alone; (b) establishment of a separate fever clinic; (c) adopt rotation system of medical staff.

After analysis, it can be found that this is because the rotation system greatly reduces the probability of mutual contact between medical staff. Although the workload of the staff will increase, they can get 14 days’ rest if they stick to it for 14 days. Also, it can be found in the analysis chart that the number of infected people will rebound after taking these three measures. This is because more people are coming to the hospital on that day, which increases the probability of personnel contact. Therefore, the hospital should control the number of patients during the epidemic period. Once the patients in the hospital are saturated, the flow of people should be diverted to other hospitals to reduce the pressure.

Influence of asymptomatic probability on epidemic transmission

The purpose of establishing a separate fever clinic is to isolate the infection and suspected cases from other patients who come to the hospital, as well as the staff of other departments of the hospital, to achieve the purpose of prevention and control. However, how the proportion of asymptomatic infection affects the spread of the epidemic in other departments of the hospital is an important issue worthy of attention. At present, there is no consensus on the proportion of asymptomatic patients. Therefore, multiple asymptomatic probabilities are employed here to simulate its impacts.

Figure 6 shows the epidemic situation without prevention and control measures, with σ2 of 0.1, 0.2 and 0.3, respectively. It can be found that the epidemic situation corresponding to different σ2 values is significantly different. With the increase of σ2, the rate of case increase is faster. When σ2 = 0.1, the peak of the number of cases will reach 55 at most, and the number of cases will begin to decrease after 24 days. With the increase of σ2, the scale of infection increased significantly, and the infection rate was accelerated. When σ2 is 0.2, the peak number of infected people is 71, while when σ2 is 0.3, the number of infected people will be close to 90.

Figure 6. Simulation of different asymptomatic probabilities of σ2: (a) σ2 = 0.1; (b) σ2 = 0.2; (c) σ2 = 0.3.

Figure 7 shows the new epidemic situation under the control measures. The prevention and control measures were defined as the establishment of a separate fever clinic (threshold = 1) and simulated under different asymptomatic probabilities. It can be found that after the implementation of prevention and control measures, the outbreak of the epidemic has been controlled to a certain extent, especially when σ2 is 0.1, the peak number of infected people is reduced from 55 to 23, and even if σ2 is 0.3, the peak number of infected people will not exceed 40. And the peak of the epidemic has been prolonged, which can reduce the pressure on the hospital and arrange the epidemic prevention materials more reasonably.

Figure 7. Influence of prevention and control measures with different asymptomatic probability: (a) σ2 = 0.1; (b) σ2 = 0.2; (c) σ2 = 0.3.

Influence of latent period infectivity on epidemic transmission

The novel coronavirus pneumonia will spread and hide in the incubation period. This phenomenon brings great difficulties in epidemic prevention and control. At present, novel coronavirus pneumonia can only be identified as infectious in the incubation period, but the accurate transmission capacity and the infection days in the incubation period are not yet determined. In order to compare the influence of latent period infectivity on the spread of epidemic situations, this paper simulated three situations: non-infectious in the incubation period, infectious in the last day of the incubation period and infectious in the last two days of the incubation period.

Figure 8 shows the change of the median of individual cases in the simulation over time in these three cases and shows the situation of hospital outbreak without prevention and control measures (threshold is 1).

Figure 8. Influence of latent infectivity on epidemic situation: (a) the incubation period was not infectious; (b) infectious on the last day of incubation; (c) the last 2 days of incubation period are infectious.

As can be seen from Figure 8, compared with the other two cases, when there is no infection in the incubation period, the transmission speed of the epidemic is the slowest, and the peak number of cases is also the lowest. When the incubation period is infectious, no matter how many days of infection, the number of cases will reach the peak around 20 days, and the transmission speed will accelerate with the increase of infection days. It should be noted that in these three cases, the number of infected people accounted for more than 30% of the hospital medical staff, that is to say, no matter what the situation of transmission in the incubation period, if no prevention and control measures are taken, there is a high probability of outbreak.

Conclusions and discussion

This research employed micro-scale interpersonal contact data to analyse and simulate the impacts of various prevention and control measures to contain the virus transmission in hospitals and further explore the influence of asymptomatic infection and incubation periods. This research presented four key findings.

First, the effective distances between the medical staff show that the staff members in outpatient departments have more contact with patients, especially those working in the pharmacy. It should be noted that the number of inpatient nurses contacting patients is far less than the number of outpatient staff contacting patients. However, the doctors in the outpatient department need to connect with the inpatient department and make rounds, so they have more contact with the medical staff and patients in the inpatient department. The results show that the virus is more easily transmitted within the hospital.

Second, three proactive control measures are proposed to minimise the personal contacts within the hospital, including medical staff works alone, establishment of a separate fever clinic and a rotation system of medical staff, once there is one patient with COVID-19 symptoms in any departments of the hospital. This will effectively reduce the contacts among doctors and between medical staff with the patents.

Third, an improved SEIR model was adopted here to simulate the transmission of the epidemics within the hospital to evaluate the effectiveness of the control measures. The simulation shows that the virus will spread rapidly and cause large-scale infection in the hospital before adopting control measures. After applying different prevention and control measures, the transmission speed of COVID-19 and the cumulative number of infected people decreased significantly. In the whole epidemic cycle, the implementation of the medical staff rotation system has the most significant impact on the prevention and control of the epidemic. Besides, the establishment of a separate fever clinic and medical staff working alone also benefits from inhibiting the outbreak of the epidemic.

Last, asymptomatic patients and patients within incubation periods bring new challenges to contain COVID-19 transmission. The simulation finds that if effective prevention and control measures are not taken in time, it will lead to a surge of infection cases in all asymptomatic probabilities and incubation periods.

These findings contribute a body of evidence on formulating reasonable intervention policy and containing the virus transmission. These analysis results and policy suggestions are also consistent with the recent WHO initiative to protect the safety of medical staff (WHO, 2020b). Community Service Centres and hospitals need to make timely responses and take effective measures, such as purchasing sufficient medical materials, optimising the consultation processes and strengthening daily management.

However, our analysis presents the following limitations, which in turn reveal avenues for future research. First, COVID-19 is a novel virus, and human beings know little about it. With the deepening of people’s understanding of COVID-19, there is still space for improving the model parameters. Second, the interpersonal contact data are collected from regular records and the hospital database. The dataset ignored the random activities and the contacts among admin staffs, which may affect the accuracy of results. Future studies should incorporate other data sources to improve the collection completeness of interpersonal contacts. For instance, the movement of the patients within the hospital, and the possible contact they might have with each other. Moreover, the length of contact can also be considered in defining the effective distance. Also, collecting the real infection data of medical staff and patients in the early stage of the pandemic will benefit from improving the accuracy of results and conducting the comparative analysis.

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the UKRI Medical Research Council: COVID-19 Rapid Response: Virus Watch: Understanding Community incidence, Symptom profiles, and Transmission of COVID-19 in relation to Population Movement and Behaviour (MC_PC_19070). The authors acknowledge the hospital for the provision of the contact data. The authors would like to thank the anonymous reviewers for their comments.

Authors’ contributions

T.C. guided the research and contributed the writing of the article; J.L. contributed the data collection, conceived and performed the analysis; Y.L., X.Z. and X.G. contributed writing and data visualisation. All authors reviewed the paper for content and approved the final report.

Conflicts of interest

None.

References

Adams, JG and Walls, RM (2020) Supporting the health care workforce during the COVID-19 global epidemic. Journal of the American Medical Association 323, 14391440.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Annas, S, Isbar Pratama, M, Rifandi, M, Sanusi, W and Side, S (2020) Stability analysis and numerical simulation of SEIR model for pandemic COVID-19 spread in Indonesia. Chaos, Solitons and Fractals 139, 110072.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Asai, Y and Nishiura, H (2018) Identifying the transmission route of influenza A(H1N1) 2009 in Japan by geographic, effective and phylogenetic distances. International Journal of Infectious Diseases 73, 210.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bai, Y, Yao, L, Wei, T, Tian, F, Jin, DY, Chen, L and Wang, M (2020) Presumed asymptomatic carrier transmission of COVID-19. Journal of the American Medical Association 323, 14061407.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Beijing Daily Client (2020) Novel Coronavirus infected more than 87,000 medical workers in India. Baidu-Baijiahao.Google Scholar
Chang, D, Xu, H, Rebaza, A, Sharma, L and Dela Cruz, CS (2020) Protecting health-care workers from subclinical coronavirus infection. The Lancet Respiratory Medicine 8, e13.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Deutsch, KW and Isard, W (2007) A note on a generalised concept of effective distance. Behavioral Science 6, 308311. CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dietz, K (1992) Infectious diseases of humans: dynamics and control. In Anderson, RM and May, RM, editor, Parasitology today, Volume 8. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 757.Google Scholar
Dye, C and Gay, N (2003) Modeling the SARS epidemic. Science 300, 18841885.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fauver, JR, Petrone, ME., Hodcroft, EB, Shioda, K, Ehrlich, HY, Watts, AG, Vogels, CBF, Brito, AF, Alpert, T, Muyombwe, A, Razeq, J, Downing, R, Cheemarla, NR, Wyllie, AL, Kalinich, CC, Ott, IM, Quick, J, Loman, NJ, Neugebauer, KM, Greninger, AL, Jerome, KR, Roychoudhury, P, Xie, H, Shrestha, L, Huang, ML, Pitzer, VE, Iwasaki, A, Omer, SB, Khan, K, Bogoch, II, Martinello, RA, Foxman, EF, Landry, ML, Neher, RA, Ko, AI and Grubaugh, ND (2020) Coast-to-coast spread of SARS-CoV-2 during the early epidemic in the United States. Cell 181, 990.e5996.e5.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gan, WH, Lim, JW and Koh, D (2020) Preventing intra-hospital infection and transmission of coronavirus disease 2019 in health-care workers. Safety and Health at Work 11, 241243. CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Harrison, D, Muradali, K, El Sahly, H, Bozkurt, B and Jneid, H (2020) Impact of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic on health-care workers. Hospital Practice 48, 161164. CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ives, J, Greenfield, S, Parry, JM, Draper, H, Gratus, C, Petts, JI, Sorell, T and Wilson, S (2009) Healthcare workers’ attitudes to working during pandemic influenza: a qualitative study. BMC Public Health 9, 5656 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
John Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center (JHCRC) (2020) COVID-19 Dashboard. Google Scholar
Kamel Boulos, MN and Geraghty, EM (2020) Geographical tracking and mapping of coronavirus disease COVID-19/severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) epidemic and associated events around the world: how 21st century GIS technologies are supporting the global fight against outbreak. International Journal of Health Geographics 19, 88. CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Li, X, Huang, J and Zhang, H (2008) An analysis of hospital preparedness capacity for public health emergency in four regions of China: Beijing, Shandong, Guangxi, and Hainan. BMC Public Health 8, 319319. CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Long, QX, Tang, XJ, Shi, QL, Li, Q, Deng, HJ, Yuan, J, Hu, JL, Xu, W, Zhang, Y, Lv, FJ, Su, K, Zhang, F, Gong, J, Wu, B, Liu, XM, Li, JJ, Qiu, JF, Chen, J and Huang, AL (2020) Clinical and immunological assessment of asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infections. Nature Medicine 26, 12001204. CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nguyen, LH, Drew, DA, Graham, MS, Joshi, AD, Guo, CG, Ma, W, Mehta, RS, Warner, ET, Sikavi, DR, Lo, CH, Kwon, S, Song, M, Mucci, LA, Stampfer, MJ, Willett, WC, Eliassen, AH, Hart, JE, Chavarro, JE, Rich-Edwards, JW (2020) Risk of COVID-19 among front-line health-care workers and the general community: a prospective cohort study. The Lancet Public Health 5, e475e483. CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
North Evening New Vision Network (2020a) More than 3,000 medical workers in Hubei have been infected with COVID-19, and none of the medical workers in Wuhan have been infected. Baidu-Baijiahao.Google Scholar
North Evening New Vision Network (2020b) The first medical worker to die from a novel Coronavirus in Korea. Baidu-Baijiahao.Google Scholar
Pandey, G, Chaudhary, P, Gupta, R and Pal, S (2020) SEIR and regression model based COVID-19 outbreak predictions in India. 1–10.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
People’s Network (2020) Harbin epidemic transmission chain extended again! There are also medical staffs infected. China Daily.Google Scholar
Prem, K, Liu, Y, Russell, TW, Kucharski, AJ, Eggo, RM, Davies, N, Flasche, S, Clifford, S, Pearson, CAB, Munday, JD, Abbott, S, Gibbs, H, Rosello, A, Quilty, BJ, Jombart, T, Sun, F, Diamond, C, Gimma, A, van Zandvoort, K (2020) The effect of control strategies to reduce social mixing on outcomes of the COVID-19 epidemic in Wuhan, China: a modelling study. The Lancet Public Health 5, e261e270 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rachah, A and Torres, DFM (2017) Analysis, simulation and optimal control of a seir model for ebola virus with demographic effects. arXiv 1, 179197.Google Scholar
R&acaron;dulescu, A, Williams, C and Cavanagh, K (2020) Management strategies in a SEIR-type model of COVID 19 community spread. Scientific Reports 10, 121. Google Scholar
Reference News (2020) Hospitals are the main source of infection in Spain, and many health workers don’t know if they are infected. Baidu-Baijiahao.Google Scholar
Shi, S, Tanaka, S, Ueno, R, Gilmour, S, Tanoue, Y, Kawashima, T, Nomura, S, Eguchi, A, Miyata, H and Yoneoka, D (2020) Travel restrictions and sars-cov-2 transmission: an effective distance approach to estimate impact. Bulletin of the World Health Organization 98, 518529. CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sotgiu, G, Barassi, A, Miozzo, M, Saderi, L, Piana, A, Orfeo, N, Colosio, C, Felisati, G, Davì, M, Gerli, AG and Centanni, S (2020) SARS-CoV-2 specific serological pattern in healthcare workers of an Italian COVID-19 forefront hospital. BMC Pulmonary Medicine 20, 203203. CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sun, H, Xu, M and Xu, X (2020) Infection and prevention of COVID-19 in schools based on real-life interpersonal contact data. Journal of the University of Electronic Science and Technology of China 49, 33993407. Google Scholar
World Health Organization (2020a) Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) situation report - 73. WHO. Available from: https://www.who.int/docs/default-source/coronaviruse/situation-reports/20200402-sitrep-73-covid-19.pdf Google Scholar
World Health Organization (2020b) Keep health workers safe to keep patients safe. WHO. Available from: https://www.who.int/zh/news/item/17-09-2020-keep-health-workers-safe-to-keep-patients-safe-whoGoogle Scholar
World Health Organization (2020c) Rolling updates on coronavirus disease (COVID-19). WHO. Available from: https://www.who.int/emergencies/diseases/novel-coronavirus-2019/events-as-they-happen Google Scholar
Yang, Z, Zeng, Z, Wang, K, Wong, SS, Liang, W, Zanin, M, Liu, P, Cao, X, Gao, Z, Mai, Z, Liang, J, Liu, X, Li, S, Li, Y, Ye, F, Guan, W, Yang, Y, Li, F, Luo, S, Xie, Y, Liu, B, Wang, Z, Zhang, S, Wang, Y, Zhong, N, He, YJ (2020) Modified SEIR and AI prediction of the epidemics trend of COVID-19 in China under public health interventions. Journal of Thoracic Disease 12, 165174. CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Yi, N, Zhang, Q, Mao, K, Yang, D and Li, Q (2009) Analysis and control of an SEIR epidemic system with nonlinear transmission rate. Mathematical and Computer Modelling 50, 14981513. CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Yin, N (2020) A simulation of COVID-19 epidemic propagation in limited area based on SIR model. Statistics and Decision 5, 23. Google Scholar
Zhou, F, Li, J, Lu, M, Ma, L, Pan, Y, Liu, X, Zhu, X, Hu, C, Wu, S, Chen, L, Wang, Y, Wei, Y, Li, Y, Xu, H, Wang, X and Cai, L (2020) Tracing asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 carriers among 3674 hospital staff: a cross-sectional survey. EClinicalMedicine 26, 100510.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zhou, P, Huang, Z, Xiao, Y, Huang, X and Fan, XG (2020) Protecting Chinese healthcare workers while combating the 2019 novel coronavirus. Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology 41, 745746.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zu, J, Li, ML, Li, ZF, Shen, MW, Xiao, YN and Ji, FP (2020) Transmission patterns of COVID-19 in the mainland of China and the efficacy of different control strategies: a data- and model-driven study. Infectious Diseases of Poverty 9, 183.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Table 1. Interpersonal contact data in the inpatient department in December

Figure 1

Table 2. Example of contact data between outpatient medical staff and patients in December

Figure 2

Table 3. Example of contact data between outpatient medical staff and patients in February

Figure 3

Figure 1. Comparison of the number of patients in the hospital before (i.e., December 2019) and after (i.e., February 2020) the COVID-19 outbreak.

Figure 4

Figure 2. Improved SEIR model

Figure 5

Figure 3. Calculated effective distance between individuals in the hospital

Figure 6

Figure 4. Simulation of hospital outbreak without any measures and policies

Figure 7

Figure 5. Simulation of the outbreak in the hospital after the implementation of relevant measures: (a) medical staff works alone; (b) establishment of a separate fever clinic; (c) adopt rotation system of medical staff.

Figure 8

Figure 6. Simulation of different asymptomatic probabilities of σ2: (a) σ2 = 0.1; (b) σ2 = 0.2; (c) σ2 = 0.3.

Figure 9

Figure 7. Influence of prevention and control measures with different asymptomatic probability: (a) σ2 = 0.1; (b) σ2 = 0.2; (c) σ2 = 0.3.

Figure 10

Figure 8. Influence of latent infectivity on epidemic situation: (a) the incubation period was not infectious; (b) infectious on the last day of incubation; (c) the last 2 days of incubation period are infectious.