Estimating data-driven coronavirus disease 2019 mitigation strategies for safe university reopening

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Abstract

After one pandemic year of remote or hybrid instructional modes, universities struggled with plans for an in-person autumn (fall) semester in 2021. To help inform university reopening policies, we collected survey data on social contact patterns and developed an agent-based model to simulate the spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 in university settings. Considering a reproduction number of R0 = 3 and 70% immunization effectiveness, we estimated that at least 80% of the university population immunized through natural infection or vaccination is needed for safe university reopening with relaxed non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs). By contrast, at least 60% of the university population immunized through natural infection or vaccination is needed for safe university reopening when NPIs are adopted. Nevertheless, attention needs to be paid to large-gathering events that could lead to infection size spikes. At an immunization coverage of 70%, continuing NPIs, such as wearing masks, could lead to a 78.39% reduction in the maximum cumulative infections and a 67.59% reduction in the median cumulative infections. However, even though this reduction is very beneficial, there is still a possibility of nonnegligible size outbreaks because the maximum cumulative infection size is equal to 1.61% of the population, which is substantial.

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Yang, Q., Gruenbacher, D. M., & Scoglio, C. M. (2022). Estimating data-driven coronavirus disease 2019 mitigation strategies for safe university reopening. Journal of the Royal Society Interface, 19(188). https://doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2021.0920

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