The Heterogeneous Severity of COVID-19 in African Countries: A Modeling Approach

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Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has had a considerable impact on global health and economics. The impact in African countries has not been investigated thoroughly via fitting epidemic models to the reported COVID-19 deaths. We downloaded the data for the 12 most-affected countries with the highest cumulative COVID-19 deaths to estimate the time-varying basic reproductive number (R(t)) and infection attack rate. We develop a simple epidemic model and fitted it to reported COVID-19 deaths in 12 African countries using iterated filtering and allowing a flexible transmission rate. We observe high heterogeneity in the case-fatality rate across the countries, which may be due to different reporting or testing efforts. South Africa, Tunisia, and Libya were most affected, exhibiting a relatively higher R(t) and infection attack rate. Thus, to effectively control the spread of COVID-19 epidemics in Africa, there is a need to consider other mitigation strategies (such as improvements in socioeconomic well-being, healthcare systems, the water supply, and awareness campaigns).

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Musa, S. S., Wang, X., Zhao, S., Li, S., Hussaini, N., Wang, W., & He, D. (2022). The Heterogeneous Severity of COVID-19 in African Countries: A Modeling Approach. Bulletin of Mathematical Biology, 84(3). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11538-022-00992-x

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