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COVID-19 Epidemic Study II: Phased Emergence From the Lockdown in Mumbai (2006.03375v1)

Published 5 Jun 2020 in q-bio.PE, cs.OH, physics.soc-ph, and q-bio.QM

Abstract: The nation-wide lockdown starting 25 March 2020, aimed at suppressing the spread of the COVID-19 disease, was extended until 31 May 2020 in three subsequent orders by the Government of India. The extended lockdown has had significant social and economic consequences and `lockdown fatigue' has likely set in. Phased reopening began from 01 June 2020 onwards. Mumbai, one of the most crowded cities in the world, has witnessed both the largest number of cases and deaths among all the cities in India (41986 positive cases and 1368 deaths as of 02 June 2020). Many tough decisions are going to be made on re-opening in the next few days. In an earlier IISc-TIFR Report, we presented an agent-based city-scale simulator(ABCS) to model the progression and spread of the infection in large metropolises like Mumbai and Bengaluru. As discussed in IISc-TIFR Report 1, ABCS is a useful tool to model interactions of city residents at an individual level and to capture the impact of non-pharmaceutical interventions on the infection spread. In this report we focus on Mumbai. Using our simulator, we consider some plausible scenarios for phased emergence of Mumbai from the lockdown, 01 June 2020 onwards. These include phased and gradual opening of the industry, partial opening of public transportation (modelling of infection spread in suburban trains), impact of containment zones on controlling infections, and the role of compliance with respect to various intervention measures including use of masks, case isolation, home quarantine, etc. The main takeaway of our simulation results is that a phased opening of workplaces, say at a conservative attendance level of 20 to 33\%, is a good way to restart economic activity while ensuring that the city's medical care capacity remains adequate to handle the possible rise in the number of COVID-19 patients in June and July.

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Authors (10)
  1. Prahladh Harsha (41 papers)
  2. Sandeep Juneja (24 papers)
  3. Preetam Patil (3 papers)
  4. Nihesh Rathod (4 papers)
  5. Ramprasad Saptharishi (28 papers)
  6. A. Y. Sarath (1 paper)
  7. Sharad Sriram (1 paper)
  8. Piyush Srivastava (24 papers)
  9. Rajesh Sundaresan (49 papers)
  10. Nidhin Koshy Vaidhiyan (6 papers)
Citations (12)