RUS  ENG
Full version
JOURNALS // Regular and Chaotic Dynamics // Archive

Regul. Chaotic Dyn., 2020 Volume 25, Issue 6, Pages 509–521 (Mi rcd1080)

This article is cited in 7 papers

Confinement Strategies in a Simple SIR Model

Gilberto Nakamuraab, Basil Grammaticosab, Mathilde Badoualab

a Université Paris-Saclay, CNRS/IN2P3, IJCLab, 91405 Orsay, France
b Université de Paris, IJCLab, 91405 Orsay, France

Abstract: We propose a simple deterministic, differential equation-based, SIR model in order to investigate the impact of various confinement strategies on a most virulent epidemic. Our approach is motivated by the current COVID-19 pandemic. The main hypothesis is the existence of two populations of susceptible persons, one which obeys confinement and for which the infection rate does not exceed 1, and a population which, being non confined for various imperatives, can be substantially more infective. The model, initially formulated as a differential system, is discretised following a specific procedure, the discrete system serving as an integrator for the differential one. Our model is calibrated so as to correspond to what is observed in the COVID-19 epidemic, for the period from February 19 to April 16.
Several conclusions can be reached, despite the very simple structure of our model. First, it is not possible to pinpoint the genesis of the epidemic by just analysing data from when the epidemic is in full swing. It may well turn out that the epidemic has reached a sizeable part of the world months before it became noticeable. Concerning the confinement scenarios, a universal feature of all our simulations is that relaxing the lockdown constraints leads to a rekindling of the epidemic. Thus, we sought the conditions for the second epidemic peak to be lower than the first one. This is possible in all the scenarios considered (abrupt or gradualexit, the latter having linear and stepwise profiles), but typically a gradual exit can start earlier than an abrupt one. However, by the time the gradual exit is complete, the overall confinement times are not too different. From our results, the most promising strategy is that of a stepwise exit. Its implementation could be quite feasible, with the major part of the population (perhaps, minus the fragile groups) exiting simultaneously, but obeying rigorous distancing constraints.

Keywords: epidemics, modelling, SIR model, lockdown.

MSC: 34A34, 37M05, 37N25, 39A30, 65L12, 92D30

Received: 17.04.2020
Accepted: 09.09.2020

Language: English

DOI: 10.1134/S1560354720060015



Bibliographic databases:


© Steklov Math. Inst. of RAS, 2024