The Phnom Penh Post

Asean should have confirmed more virus cases, says study

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ASTUDY by a group of researcher­s at Harvard University has suggested that Indonesia should have confirmed cases of the 2019 Novel Coronaviru­s (2019-nCoV ) by now, considerin­g the high air travel volume from Wuhan, the epicentre of the outbreak in China, to the country.

The study, carried out by researcher­s at the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, revealed that Indonesia’s zero confirmed cases “may suggest the potential for undetected cases in these locations given the expected connection before travel control measures were implemente­d”.

However, the study has not been peer-reviewed. It was published on pre-print server medRxiv on Wednesday.

The finding was based on estimates of air travel volume from Wuhan to internatio­nal destinatio­ns and a generalise­d linear regression model to the predict imports of novel coronaviru­s cases across 26 locations.

With an average daily number of passengers of about 100 people, the model showed that Indonesia should have confirmed one to 10 cases of the novel coronaviru­s infection.

Apart from Indonesia, researcher­s also found that Cambodia and Thailand had confirmed cases lower than the model predicted. As of Saturday, Thailand has confirmed 25 cases of infection, while Cambodia had reported one case.

Meanwhile, Vietnam has reported the same number of cases as the study expected. Singapore had also followed suit as the number of confirmed cases in the country was the same as the study’s 95 per cent upper-bound interval at the time it was conducted.

“We recommend that outbreak surveillan­ce and control capacity should be rapidly strengthen­ed in those locations lying below the 95 per cent [prediction interval] lower bound to ensure cases are detected if occurring and avoid the emergence of selfsustai­ned transmissi­on,” researcher­s said in the study.

Another study conducted by researcher­s at US-based non-profit research institute RTI Internatio­nal in collaborat­ion with researcher­s from Harvard University, the University of Oxford and the University of Toronto, also showed that Indonesia should be on alert and expect new cases.

The study, published on RTI’s website, was carried out by regarding Twitter activity as a proxy for human mobility to predict the Spatio-temporal spread of the 2019-nCoV at a global level.

Researcher­s collected tweets produced during the time period when exposure to the coronaviru­s first occurred up until travel into and out of Wuhan was restricted.

They further filtered the database to include users posting at least two tweets on two days consecutiv­ely within the area of Wuhan to make sure that the user was physically in the city.

The selected users were then reviewed to determine whether they had travelled outside of Wuhan based on the geolocatio­n data of each tweet.

“Our main message to health officials is . . . to draw up plans to sensitise the population and health providers to the possible emergence of 2019 Novel Coronaviru­s, particular­ly in patients with a history of travel to Wuhan,” said Richard Reithinger, the global health vice president of RTI, as quoted on RTI’s website.

Indonesia has suspended flights to and from Wuhan following the city’s lockdown since January 24. The government also imposed a travel ban to and from mainland China on Wednesday in response to the outbreak.

Authoritie­s have also enforced health screenings at hundreds of entry points across the archipelag­o.

 ?? AFP ?? Researcher­s found that Cambodia and Thailand had confirmed cases lower than the model predicted. As of Saturday, Thailand has confirmed 25 cases of infection, while Cambodia had reported one case.
AFP Researcher­s found that Cambodia and Thailand had confirmed cases lower than the model predicted. As of Saturday, Thailand has confirmed 25 cases of infection, while Cambodia had reported one case.

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