Policy decisions on COVID-19 interventions should be informed by a local, regional and national understanding of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) transmission. Epidemic waves may result when restrictions are lifted or poorly adhered to, variants with new phenotypic properties successfully invade, or infection spreads to susceptible subpopulations. Three COVID-19 epidemic waves have been observed in Kenya. Using a mechanistic mathematical model, we explain the first two distinct waves by differences in contact rates in high and low social-economic groups, and the third wave by the introduction of higher-transmissibility variants. Reopening schools led to a minor increase in transmission between the second and third waves. Socioeconomic and urban-rural population structure are critical determinants of viral transmission in Kenya.
CITATION STYLE
Brand, S. P. C., Ojal, J., Aziza, R., Were, V., Okiro, E. A., Kombe, I. K., … Barasa, E. (2021). COVID-19 transmission dynamics underlying epidemic waves in Kenya. Science, 374(6570), 989–994. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.abk0414
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