BFF-10 Social distancing appears to slow virus spread in Seattle: report

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US-HEALTH-VIRUS-SEATTLE

Social distancing appears to slow virus spread in Seattle: report

LOS ANGELES, March 31, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – Self-isolation and social
distancing appear to have slowed the rate at which coronavirus spread from
person-to-person over three weeks in the Seattle area, a new statistical
study has found.

The Institute for Disease Modeling (IDM) looked at government-compiled
health data in the coronavirus hotspot of Washington state, as well as
anonymized Facebook location data, to calculate the impact of the lockdown.

The northwestern state, where the first US case was confirmed, began to ban
large gatherings and shutter schools in early March.

Public health data, including positive and negative tests and overall
mortality, appear to show that “the epidemic has slowed” since then, the
study found.

The disease’s reproductive number — the amount of people a single patient
will infect on average — dropped by nearly half, from 2.7 at the end of
February to 1.4 by March 18, it calculated.

“The main takeaway here is though we’ve made some great headway, our
progress is precarious and insufficient,” said Daniel Klein, one of the
leaders of the study, on Monday.

The reproductive number must fall below one for the pandemic to decline,
the authors noted.

Facebook location data indicated “a persistent decline in mobility” and
“strong evidence that people have been staying at home” over the period, the
report found.

It showed an average 27 percent increase in the occupancy of residential
areas, and a 43 percent decline in areas with offices such as central
Seattle.

The state’s stay-at-home order was “timely and necessary” but must be
maintained, and “more progress is necessary,” the report said, noting that
the models drew on a small amount of data and contain considerable
uncertainty.

“We are seeing a positive effect from the social distancing and other
measures we’ve put in place, although significant numbers of cases and deaths
continue to occur,” said King County health director Jeff Duchin.

Authorities said Monday there were 2,330 cases and 150 deaths in the
county, which encompasses Seattle.

“The threat of a rebound that could overwhelm the healthcare system remains
and will remain for the foreseeable future if we let up too soon,” Duchin
said.

BSS/AFP/GMR/1010 hrs