COVID-19 pandemic spread against countries’ non-pharmaceutical interventions responses: a data-mining driven comparative study

Abstract Background The first half of 2020 has been marked as the era of COVID-19 pandemic which affected the world globally in almost every aspect of the daily life from societal to economical. To prevent the spread of COVID-19, countries have implemented diverse policies regarding Non-Pharmaceutic...

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Main Authors: Konstantinos F. Xylogiannopoulos, Panagiotis Karampelas, Reda Alhajj
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-09-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-11251-4
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spelling doaj-ac5c9db60684418a9361bdb2dbd8090e2021-09-05T11:23:06ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582021-09-0121115410.1186/s12889-021-11251-4COVID-19 pandemic spread against countries’ non-pharmaceutical interventions responses: a data-mining driven comparative studyKonstantinos F. Xylogiannopoulos0Panagiotis Karampelas1Reda Alhajj2Department of Computer Science, University of CalgaryHellenic Air Force AcademyDepartment of Computer Science, University of CalgaryAbstract Background The first half of 2020 has been marked as the era of COVID-19 pandemic which affected the world globally in almost every aspect of the daily life from societal to economical. To prevent the spread of COVID-19, countries have implemented diverse policies regarding Non-Pharmaceutical Intervention (NPI) measures. This is because in the first stage countries had limited knowledge about the virus and its contagiousness. Also, there was no effective medication or vaccines. This paper studies the effectiveness of the implemented policies and measures against the deaths attributed to the virus between January and May 2020. Methods Data from the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control regarding the identified cases and deaths of COVID-19 from 48 countries have been used. Additionally, data concerning the NPI measures related policies implemented by the 48 countries and the capacity of their health care systems was collected manually from their national gazettes and official institutes. Data mining, time series analysis, pattern detection, machine learning, clustering methods and visual analytics techniques have been applied to analyze the collected data and discover possible relationships between the implemented NPIs and COVID-19 spread and mortality. Further, we recorded and analyzed the responses of the countries against COVID-19 pandemic, mainly in urban areas which are over-populated and accordingly COVID-19 has the potential to spread easier among humans. Results The data mining and clustering analysis of the collected data showed that the implementation of the NPI measures before the first death case seems to be very effective in controlling the spread of the disease. In other words, delaying the implementation of the NPI measures to after the first death case has practically little effect on limiting the spread of the disease. The success of implementing the NPI measures further depends on the way each government monitored their application. Countries with stricter policing of the measures seems to be more effective in controlling the transmission of the disease. Conclusions The conducted comparative data mining study provides insights regarding the correlation between the early implementation of the NPI measures and controlling COVID-19 contagiousness and mortality. We reported a number of useful observations that could be very helpful to the decision makers or epidemiologists regarding the rapid implementation and monitoring of the NPI measures in case of a future wave of COVID-19 or to deal with other unknown infectious pandemics. Regardless, after the first wave of COVID-19, most countries have decided to lift the restrictions and return to normal. This has resulted in a severe second wave in some countries, a situation which requires re-evaluating the whole process and inspiring lessons for the future.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-11251-4COVID-19NPIsNon-pharmaceutical interventionsClusteringData analysisSeasonal infections
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Konstantinos F. Xylogiannopoulos
Panagiotis Karampelas
Reda Alhajj
spellingShingle Konstantinos F. Xylogiannopoulos
Panagiotis Karampelas
Reda Alhajj
COVID-19 pandemic spread against countries’ non-pharmaceutical interventions responses: a data-mining driven comparative study
BMC Public Health
COVID-19
NPIs
Non-pharmaceutical interventions
Clustering
Data analysis
Seasonal infections
author_facet Konstantinos F. Xylogiannopoulos
Panagiotis Karampelas
Reda Alhajj
author_sort Konstantinos F. Xylogiannopoulos
title COVID-19 pandemic spread against countries’ non-pharmaceutical interventions responses: a data-mining driven comparative study
title_short COVID-19 pandemic spread against countries’ non-pharmaceutical interventions responses: a data-mining driven comparative study
title_full COVID-19 pandemic spread against countries’ non-pharmaceutical interventions responses: a data-mining driven comparative study
title_fullStr COVID-19 pandemic spread against countries’ non-pharmaceutical interventions responses: a data-mining driven comparative study
title_full_unstemmed COVID-19 pandemic spread against countries’ non-pharmaceutical interventions responses: a data-mining driven comparative study
title_sort covid-19 pandemic spread against countries’ non-pharmaceutical interventions responses: a data-mining driven comparative study
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Abstract Background The first half of 2020 has been marked as the era of COVID-19 pandemic which affected the world globally in almost every aspect of the daily life from societal to economical. To prevent the spread of COVID-19, countries have implemented diverse policies regarding Non-Pharmaceutical Intervention (NPI) measures. This is because in the first stage countries had limited knowledge about the virus and its contagiousness. Also, there was no effective medication or vaccines. This paper studies the effectiveness of the implemented policies and measures against the deaths attributed to the virus between January and May 2020. Methods Data from the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control regarding the identified cases and deaths of COVID-19 from 48 countries have been used. Additionally, data concerning the NPI measures related policies implemented by the 48 countries and the capacity of their health care systems was collected manually from their national gazettes and official institutes. Data mining, time series analysis, pattern detection, machine learning, clustering methods and visual analytics techniques have been applied to analyze the collected data and discover possible relationships between the implemented NPIs and COVID-19 spread and mortality. Further, we recorded and analyzed the responses of the countries against COVID-19 pandemic, mainly in urban areas which are over-populated and accordingly COVID-19 has the potential to spread easier among humans. Results The data mining and clustering analysis of the collected data showed that the implementation of the NPI measures before the first death case seems to be very effective in controlling the spread of the disease. In other words, delaying the implementation of the NPI measures to after the first death case has practically little effect on limiting the spread of the disease. The success of implementing the NPI measures further depends on the way each government monitored their application. Countries with stricter policing of the measures seems to be more effective in controlling the transmission of the disease. Conclusions The conducted comparative data mining study provides insights regarding the correlation between the early implementation of the NPI measures and controlling COVID-19 contagiousness and mortality. We reported a number of useful observations that could be very helpful to the decision makers or epidemiologists regarding the rapid implementation and monitoring of the NPI measures in case of a future wave of COVID-19 or to deal with other unknown infectious pandemics. Regardless, after the first wave of COVID-19, most countries have decided to lift the restrictions and return to normal. This has resulted in a severe second wave in some countries, a situation which requires re-evaluating the whole process and inspiring lessons for the future.
topic COVID-19
NPIs
Non-pharmaceutical interventions
Clustering
Data analysis
Seasonal infections
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-11251-4
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