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New UW study shows COVID-19 doesn’t spread evenly through Seattle neighborhoods

Published on November 5, 2020

Map of Seattle, with neighborhoods delineated, showing the individual locations of residents as colored dots. The color is the timing of infection spread, with red occurring first, and blue occurring last. Black means no infection (this can be seen more clearly on the zoomed-in figure around Capitol Hill). In the zoomed-in map of Capitol Hill in the lower right, dots represent residents and colors again represent infection timing; social connections are shown as gray/black edges.
Map of Seattle, with neighborhoods delineated, showing the individual locations of residents as colored dots. The color is the timing of infection spread, with red occurring first, and blue occurring last. Black means no infection (this can be seen more clearly on the zoomed-in figure around Capitol Hill). In the zoomed-in map of Capitol Hill in the lower right, dots represent residents and colors again represent infection timing; social connections are shown as gray/black edges. Image Credit: Zack Almquist, University of Washington

new study published by researchers from the University of Washington and UC Irvine examines how COVID-19 spreads in different neighborhoods and it found the virus doesn’t spread evenly through a community.

The study, published in September in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, factors in network exposure and demographics to simulate where and how quickly COVID-19 could spread through Seattle.

The study also looked at 18 other major cities.

Researchers used U.S. Census Bureau tract demographics, simulation techniques and COVID-19 case data from last spring to estimate a range of days for the virus to spread within a given city.

Researchers found some neighborhoods peak sooner than others, and in every city, the virus lingers far longer than some might expect, according to a write-up on the study by the UW.

“The most basic takeaway from this research is risk. People are at risk longer than they think, the virus will last longer than expected, and the point at which you think you don’t need to be vigilant means that it just hasn’t happened to you yet,” said study co-author Zack Almquist, an assistant professor of sociology at the UW.

The study found denser Seattle neighborhoods, like Capitol Hill or the University District, reach peak infection rate earlier, while nearby neighborhoods, such as Montlake, won’t reach their peak infection until weeks or even years later.

Researchers said these more detail-oriented models used for this study predict more “burst-like” behavior of the coronavirus’ spread than standard models. Those models often take a high-level approach to a geographic area, like a county or state, and forecast based on a general idea that a virus will take root and spread at an equal rate until it reaches its peak infection.

 

Continue reading at King5 News.


Originally written by King5 News Staff.
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