论文标题
具有无症状传播的流行病:递归接触跟踪的亚临界相
Epidemics with asymptomatic transmission: Sub-critical phase from recursive contact tracing
论文作者
论文摘要
Covid-19-19的流行病提出的挑战对开发新方法来打击传染病。 SARS-COV-2传输的突出特性是无症状传播的显着部分。这可能会影响隔离潜在感染个体的标准接触跟踪程序的有效性。但是,无症状传播对网络流行病流行阈值的影响在很大程度上尚不清楚。在这里,我们研究了一个简单的流行网络模型中的临界渗透转变,在存在递归触点追踪算法进行即时隔离的情况下。我们发现,在一定比例的无症状传播之上,标准触点跟踪失去了其抑制在流行阈值以下传播的能力。但是,我们还发现,递归接触追踪为含有大量无症状或预症状传播的流行病所带来的可能性。特别是,我们计算参与具有任意程度分布和不同递归深度的网络接触跟踪的网络节点的所需比例,并讨论了递归深度和无症状率对流行病渗透相变的影响。我们使用在感染树和网络上的数值模拟测试并说明了我们的理论结果。我们预计递归触点跟踪为基于数字的,基于应用程序的接触跟踪工具提供了基础,该工具将接触跟踪的效率扩展到具有很大一部分无症状传播的疾病。
The challenges presented by the COVID-19 epidemic have created a renewed interest in the development of new methods to combat infectious diseases. A prominent property of the SARS-CoV-2 transmission is the significant fraction of asymptomatic transmission. This may influence the effectiveness of the standard contact tracing procedure for quarantining potentially infected individuals. However, the effects of asymptomatic transmission on the epidemic threshold of epidemic spreading on networks are largely unknown. Here we study the critical percolation transition in a simple epidemic network model in the presence of a recursive contact tracing algorithm for instant quarantining. We find that, above a certain fraction of asymptomatic transmission, standard contact tracing loses its ability to suppress spreading below the epidemic threshold. However, we also find that recursive contact tracing opens a possibility to contain epidemics with a large fraction of asymptomatic or presymptomatic transmission. In particular, we calculate the required fraction of network nodes participating in the contact tracing for networks with arbitrary degree distributions and for varying recursion depths and discuss the influence of recursion depth and asymptomatic rate on the epidemic percolation phase transition. We test and illustrate our theoretical results using numerical simulations on infection trees and networks. We anticipate recursive contact tracing to provide a basis for digital, app-based contact tracing tools that extend the efficiency of contact tracing to diseases with a large fraction of asymptomatic transmission.