When will Sydney's lockdown end? Well, it depends who you ask
- Written by James Trauer, Associate Professor, Monash University
During the pandemic, infectious disease modelling has come to prominence as never before. A plethora of models have been used to guide policy.
The models use computer programs to predict, for example, how COVID outbreaks develop and which public health measures are most likely to contain them, under different future scenarios.
Among the big questions modellers are trying to answer currently is what should Sydney’s strategy be for addressing its current Delta outbreak, to allow release from lockdown while minimising COVID-related deaths.
Different groups of researchers give different predictions. And it’s easy to be bewildered, especially if you’re in lockdown and looking for answers.
Why do answers vary?
At their best, infectious disease models should provide a way of integrating all the available information relevant to the problem at hand. This includes the characteristics of the virus circulating, the scope of the epidemic, the history of the outbreak to date, and evidence from clinical trials and other research.
We can then use this to challenge our own ideas about what the best policy response should be and develop a high-level strategy for the future.
Many of the mathematical models that have informed COVID policy across the world have been “mechanistic”. They explicitly represent the population in which the virus is transmitting and so simulate the process of susceptible people becoming infected with the virus through exposure to others.
Although many other mathematical techniques have been used during the pandemic, this approach has the advantage of being able project the outcomes of a wide range of policy responses.
Read more: Scientific modelling is steering our response to coronavirus. But what is scientific modelling?
This approach also has several limitations. One of the most important is that tiny changes in what you feed into the model can have a huge effect on the output.
Another important consideration is that future projections inevitably represent the expected outcomes under a particular set of policy choices, which are impossible for modellers to predict.
In short, infectious disease epidemics are difficult to predict because their dynamics are volatile and dependent on the policies we choose to implement.
Let’s look at the Sydney predictions
Several groups have modelled Sydney’s lockdown recently and have shared their results with the public. These include groups at the Burnet Institute and at the universities of Sydney and Melbourne.
The Burnet model
The Burnet Institute simulates individuals and their characteristics and behaviours (an agent-based model). It can mimic the social networks through which individuals interact in specific settings, fundamental to how the epidemic spreads.
This approach is particularly well-suited to considering interventions that affect groups of people interacting. These include closing specific venues or activities, such as restaurants, gyms, schools or sporting events.
Burnet InstituteRead more: A tougher 4-week lockdown could save Sydney months of stay-at-home orders, our modelling shows
This model, released July 12, predicted a more stringent lockdown (blue line in the chart above; something like Melbourne’s stage 4 lockdown in 2020) should be enough to drive case numbers in Sydney back down towards low levels (less than five new local cases per day) over several weeks. This would lead to elimination of the virus, allowing lockdown to lift.
Authors: James Trauer, Associate Professor, Monash University
Read more https://theconversation.com/when-will-sydneys-lockdown-end-well-it-depends-who-you-ask-165459