Superspreading in early transmissions of COVID-19 in Indonesia

Abstract This paper presents a study of early epidemiological assessment of COVID-19 transmission dynamics in Indonesia. The aim is to quantify heterogeneity in the numbers of secondary infections. To this end, we estimate the basic reproduction number $$\mathscr {R}_0$$ R 0 and the overdispersion p...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Agus Hasan, Hadi Susanto, Muhammad Firmansyah Kasim, Nuning Nuraini, Bony Lestari, Dessy Triany, Widyastuti Widyastuti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2020-12-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-79352-5
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Summary:Abstract This paper presents a study of early epidemiological assessment of COVID-19 transmission dynamics in Indonesia. The aim is to quantify heterogeneity in the numbers of secondary infections. To this end, we estimate the basic reproduction number $$\mathscr {R}_0$$ R 0 and the overdispersion parameter $$\mathscr {K}$$ K at two regions in Indonesia: Jakarta–Depok and Batam. The method to estimate $$\mathscr {R}_0$$ R 0 is based on a sequential Bayesian method, while the parameter $$\mathscr {K}$$ K is estimated by fitting the secondary case data with a negative binomial distribution. Based on the first 1288 confirmed cases collected from both regions, we find a high degree of individual-level variation in the transmission. The basic reproduction number $$\mathscr {R}_0$$ R 0 is estimated at 6.79 and 2.47, while the overdispersion parameter $$\mathscr {K}$$ K of a negative-binomial distribution is estimated at 0.06 and 0.2 for Jakarta–Depok and Batam, respectively. This suggests that superspreading events played a key role in the early stage of the outbreak, i.e., a small number of infected individuals are responsible for large numbers of COVID-19 transmission. This finding can be used to determine effective public measures, such as rapid isolation and identification, which are critical since delay of diagnosis is the most common cause of superspreading events.
ISSN:2045-2322