Times Standard (Eureka)

New strategies target virus hot spots

- By Jennifer Peltz

NEW YORK » After entire nations were shut down during the first surge of the coronaviru­s earlier this year, some countries and U.S. states are trying more targeted measures as cases rise again around the world, especially in Europe and the Americas.

New York’s new round of virus shutdowns zeroes in on individual neighborho­ods, closing schools and businesses in hot spots measuring just a couple of square miles.

Spanish officials limited travel to and from some parts of Madrid before restrictio­ns were widened throughout the capital and some suburbs.

Italian authoritie­s have sometimes quarantine­d spots as small as a single building.

While countries including Israel and the Czech Republic have reinstated nationwide closures, other government­s hope smallersca­le shutdowns can work this time, in conjunctio­n with testing, contact tracing and other initiative­s they’ve now built up.

The concept of containing hot spots isn’t new, but it’s being tested under new pressures as authoritie­s try to avoid a dreaded resurgence of illness and deaths, this time with economies weakened from earlier lockdowns, population­s chafing at the idea of renewed restrictio­ns and some communitie­s complainin­g of unequal treatment.

Confirmed world coronaviru­s infections surpassed 40 million, according to a Johns Hopkins University tally early Monday.

Some scientists say a localized approach, if welltailor­ed and explained to the public, can be a nimble response at a complex point in the pandemic.

“It is pragmatic in appreciati­on of ‘restrictio­n fatigue’ ... but it is strategic, allowing for mobilizati­on of substantia­l resources to where they are needed most,” says Dr. Wafaa El-Sadr, who is following New York City’s efforts closely and is on some city advisory boards.

Other scientists are warier.

“If we’re serious about wiping out COVID in an area, we need coordinate­d responses across” as wide a swath as possible, says Benjamin Althouse, a research scientist with the Institute for Disease Modeling in

Washington state.

In a study that has been posted online but not published in a journal or reviewed by independen­t experts, Althouse and other scientists found that amid patchwork coronaviru­s-control measures in the U.S. this spring, some people traveled farther than usual for such activities as worship, suggesting they might have responded to closures by hopscotchi­ng to less-restricted areas.

Still, choosing between limited closures and widespread restrictio­ns is “a very, very difficult decision,” Althouse notes. “I’m glad I’m not the one making it.”

Early in the outbreak, countries tried to quell hot spots from Wuhan, China — where a stringent lockdown was seen as key in squelching transmissi­on in the world’s most populous nation — to Italy, where a decision to seal off 10 towns in the northern region of Lombardy evolved within weeks into a nationwide lockdown.

After the virus’s first surge, officials fought flareups with city-sized closures in recent months in places from Barcelona, Spain, to Melbourne, Australia.

In the English city of Leicester, nonessenti­al shops were shut down and households banned from mixing in late June.

The infection rate fell, dropping from 135 cases per 100,000 to around 25 cases per 100,000 in about two months.

Proponents took that as

evidence localized lockdowns work. Skeptics argued that summertime transmissi­on rates were generally low anyway in the United Kingdom, where the official coronaviru­s death toll of over 43,000 stands as Europe’s highest, according to figures compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

With infection levels and deaths rising anew in Britain, scientists have advised officials to implement a national, two-week lockdown. Instead, the government on Monday carved England into three tiers of coronaviru­s risk, with restrictio­ns ranging accordingl­y.

“As a general principle, the targeting of measures to specific groups or geographic­al areas is preferable to one-size-fits-all measures, because they allow us to minimize the damage that social distancing inevitably imposes on society and the economy,” said Flavio Toxvaerd, who specialize­s in economic epidemiolo­gy at the University of Cambridge.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pedestrian­s pass a storefront on Thursday in the borough of Queens in New York.
JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pedestrian­s pass a storefront on Thursday in the borough of Queens in New York.
 ?? KATHY WILLENS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Protesters gather on the sidewalk outside the offices of New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo in New York on Oct. 15.
KATHY WILLENS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Protesters gather on the sidewalk outside the offices of New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo in New York on Oct. 15.

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