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Digital proximity tracing on empirical contact networks for pandemic control

Author

Listed:
  • G. Cencetti

    (Fondazione Bruno Kessler)

  • G. Santin

    (Fondazione Bruno Kessler)

  • A. Longa

    (Fondazione Bruno Kessler
    University of Trento)

  • E. Pigani

    (Fondazione Bruno Kessler
    University of Padua)

  • A. Barrat

    (Université de Toulon, CNRS, CPT, Turing Center for Living Systems
    Tokyo Institute of Technology)

  • C. Cattuto

    (University of Turin
    ISI Foundation)

  • S. Lehmann

    (Technical University of Denmark)

  • M. Salathé

    (École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL))

  • B. Lepri

    (Fondazione Bruno Kessler)

Abstract

Digital contact tracing is a relevant tool to control infectious disease outbreaks, including the COVID-19 epidemic. Early work evaluating digital contact tracing omitted important features and heterogeneities of real-world contact patterns influencing contagion dynamics. We fill this gap with a modeling framework informed by empirical high-resolution contact data to analyze the impact of digital contact tracing in the COVID-19 pandemic. We investigate how well contact tracing apps, coupled with the quarantine of identified contacts, can mitigate the spread in real environments. We find that restrictive policies are more effective in containing the epidemic but come at the cost of unnecessary large-scale quarantines. Policy evaluation through their efficiency and cost results in optimized solutions which only consider contacts longer than 15–20 minutes and closer than 2–3 meters to be at risk. Our results show that isolation and tracing can help control re-emerging outbreaks when some conditions are met: (i) a reduction of the reproductive number through masks and physical distance; (ii) a low-delay isolation of infected individuals; (iii) a high compliance. Finally, we observe the inefficacy of a less privacy-preserving tracing involving second order contacts. Our results may inform digital contact tracing efforts currently being implemented across several countries worldwide.

Suggested Citation

  • G. Cencetti & G. Santin & A. Longa & E. Pigani & A. Barrat & C. Cattuto & S. Lehmann & M. Salathé & B. Lepri, 2021. "Digital proximity tracing on empirical contact networks for pandemic control," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 12(1), pages 1-12, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:12:y:2021:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-021-21809-w
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-21809-w
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    Cited by:

    1. Hong, Xiao & Han, Yuexing & Wang, Bing, 2023. "Impacts of detection and contact tracing on the epidemic spread in time-varying networks," Applied Mathematics and Computation, Elsevier, vol. 439(C).
    2. Leto Peel & Tiago P. Peixoto & Manlio De Domenico, 2022. "Statistical inference links data and theory in network science," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 13(1), pages 1-15, December.
    3. Rongxiang Su & Somayeh Dodge & Konstadinos G. Goulias, 2022. "Understanding the impact of temporal scale on human movement analytics," Journal of Geographical Systems, Springer, vol. 24(3), pages 353-388, July.

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