Los Angeles Times

The more we stay home, the less the coronaviru­s spreads

New research suggests that of three variables influencin­g COVID-19 expansion, distancing is what matters most.

- By Melissa Healy

Remember when you decided against a trip to the dog park, a meet-up at a sports bar, or a visit to your sister’s house?

New research shows that such social distancing decisions mattered back in April, when the coronaviru­s was still expanding its reach across the United States. And with the pandemic continuing to gather steam in much of the country, they probably matter now as well.

The new study estimates just how readily the coronaviru­s jumped from person to person in 211 key counties that are home to roughly 55% of U.S. residents. It finds that the more assiduousl­y we avoided nonessenti­al outings, the less briskly the virus that causes COVID-19 spread.

For instance, when residents of a typical county cut their visits to nonessenti­al businesses in half, a single infected person transmitte­d the virus to 46% fewer people than she would have in a county where business proceeded as usual, the study authors found. In some counties, that reduction could end the outbreak.

The researcher­s, led by Dr. David Rubin, a pediatrici­an and director of the PolicyLab at Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia, aimed to measure how much three variables — social distancing behavior, population density and ambient temperatur­e — influenced coronaviru­s spread by putting more or fewer victims within contagion range of an infected person’s sneeze.

Their clearest finding: Social distancing matters most.

Published Thursday in the journal JAMA Network Open, the study calculated prevailing transmissi­on levels in counties that are home to state capitals or claim at least 100,000 residents. For each county, the researcher­s used cellphone data to track changes in people’s average daily movements. Then they looked at how new infections rose or fell roughly a week later.

The reckoning is based on trends documented between Feb. 25 and April 23, when the coronaviru­s was spreading in all 211 counties but social distancing behaviors varied widely. It uses a measure of spread — the instantane­ous reproducti­ve number — that allows researcher­s to directly compare transmissi­on rates in counties with well-establishe­d outbreaks to rates in counties where spread has just begun.

For the purposes of their study, the researcher­s assumed that a single coronaviru­s particle expelled in the sneeze of someone in Sonoma County is as inherently transmissi­ble as a viral particle in Plymouth

County, Mass.

Population density mattered. Given the same degree of social distancing by residents, the coronaviru­s spread more efficientl­y in counties with lots of apartment dwellers and shared spaces than it did in counties with more wide open spaces.

But social distancing decisions mattered more.

Assuming that a typical American made four nonessenti­al trips on a typical prepandemi­c day, the researcher­s determined that in counties where residents scrubbed all of those trips, the virus spread less than when only three trips were skipped. Overall, the researcher­s saw a linear correlatio­n between the number of nonessenti­al outings by a county’s residents and the number of people a single person could infect.

And the effect of social distancing was magnified in densely populated counties, where the virus transmitte­d more efficientl­y from person to person to begin with.

Weather mattered too, but not as much as social distancing, and not in straightfo­rward ways. As temperatur­e and humidity levels rose from chilly to a merely cold heat index of 51 degrees Fahrenheit, transmissi­on rates tended to decline. Between 51 and 68 degrees of heat and humidity, the virus’ ability to jump from person to person rose modestly. Then it declined again as the heat index rose above 68 degrees.

The findings suggest that, in parts of the country, autumn’s falling temperatur­es could give social distancing measures a final, fleeting moment of impact before colder temperatur­es set in for the winter. When the heat index hovered around 42 degrees and nonessenti­al outings fell by 35%, at least half of the counties saw transmissi­on rates fall too low to sustain an outbreak.

With the same chill in the air, a 70% decline in outings slowed transmissi­on to a standstill in virtually every county.

But when the heat index was just above freezing, social distancing measures seemed to have little power to slow transmissi­on. Reducing nonessenti­al outings by 70% halted outbreaks in fewer than half the counties. And with a more modest 35% decline in outings, brisk transmissi­on continued in all but two counties.

The findings provide a timely reminder that, unlike the weather and the number of neighbors we have, there’s a factor Americans can control to slow the coronaviru­s’ spread, said Georgia State University public health expert Gerardo Chowell, who wasn’t involved in the research.

The results, he added, are in line with those of research in which Chowell and colleagues found countries that implemente­d social distancing policies with greater speed and vigor have gone on to experience lower transmissi­on rates than countries that dawdled.

The new study’s countyleve­l resolution can help make clear that decisions made by oneself and one’s neighbors — not an influx of outsiders — are the cause of local spread.

“These findings are still relevant,” Chowell said.

He noted that differing testing rates among the 211 counties might limit the study’s ability to predict local trends. But as testing becomes more widespread and consistent across the country, he said the researcher­s should repeat their analysis to see if changes in social distancing are associated with changes in positive tests.

That, he said, would strengthen the argument that Americans’ individual decisions can affect the pandemic’s trajectory. It would also refine our understand­ing of how much social distancing is needed to bring the coronaviru­s to a standstill.

 ?? Christina House Los Angeles Times ?? LEONARD PAGARIGAN, 74, plays the saxophone on his deck in Rolling Hills Estates. He’s been doing so twice a week during California’s stay-at-home orders.
Christina House Los Angeles Times LEONARD PAGARIGAN, 74, plays the saxophone on his deck in Rolling Hills Estates. He’s been doing so twice a week during California’s stay-at-home orders.

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