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by mlyle
2196 days ago
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From the very first link: > The herd immunity threshold
(HIT) defines the percentage of the population that needs to be immune to reverse epidemic
15 growth and prevent future waves. Figure 3 shows the expected downward trends in the HIT for
SARS-CoV-2 as the coefficients of variation of the gamma distributed susceptibility or exposure
are increased between 0 and 4 (to assess robustness to changing the type of distribution see
Figure S22 for equivalent plots with lognormal distributions). While herd immunity is expected
to require 60-70% of a homogeneous population to be immune given an R0 between 2.5 and 3,
20 these percentages drop to the range 10-20% for CVs between 2 and 4. Curvefitting from COVID-19 incident waves, past SARS experiences, surveying of contact tracing data, pre-epidemic mobility data in the population, etc, all point to CVs around 3 which corresponds to a herd immunity threshold of 15% or so (hence the paper's 10-20% range). I think this is optimistic and a threshold of more like 30-35% is likely, which with durable aspects of behavior change might really end up being ~25%. |
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Just reading, in one meat processing plant in Germany, from 3000 workers tested they have 1000 PCR positives (Rheda-Wiedenbrück meat processing plant, 1,029 cases so far (1)). It's already 30% of the tested and almost sure an "infection in one wave" (after some weeks a lot of people are PCR negative again). If it stays at 1000 (they will maybe test more: "On Friday morning, addresses of around 30% of the workers were still missing") it wouldn't mean it would have stayed at 1000 hadn't they closed the whole plant.
1) https://www.dw.com/en/coronavirus-german-slaughterhouse-outb...