论文标题
COVID-19活动风险计算器作为游戏化的公共卫生干预工具
COVID-19 Activity Risk Calculator as a Gamified Public Health Intervention Tool
论文作者
论文摘要
病毒严重急性呼吸综合症2(SARS-COV-2)引起的冠状病毒疾病2019年(COVID-19)大流行对200多个国家产生了影响,导致了200万人的住院和死亡。公共卫生干预措施(例如风险估计器)可以通过影响行为来减少大流行病和流行病的传播,从而影响暴露和感染的风险。当前可公开可用的Covid-19风险估计工具在大流行期间具有可变的效果,因为它们依赖于迅速发展的因素,例如社区传播水平和变体。围绕某些个人保护策略(例如戴面膜和疫苗接种的风险降低风险)也引起了困惑。为了创建一个简单的易于使用的工具,用于估计与日常生活活动相关的不同个人风险,我们开发了Covid-19活动风险计算器(COVARC)。 Covarc是一种游戏性的公共卫生干预措施,因为用户可以“使用”与Covid-19相关的不同风险如何根据日常日常活动进行的几个不同因素而改变。授权公众做出有关安全参与活动的知情,数据驱动的决定,可能有助于降低社区中的共同水平。在这项研究中,我们展示了一种流线型,可扩展和准确的Covid-19风险计算系统。我们的研究还证明了高病例计数期间疫苗接种和戴口罩的定量影响。对此影响的验证可以为有关面具授权和其他公共卫生干预措施的案件阈值提供信息和支持政策决策。
The Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, caused by the virus severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), has impacted over 200 countries leading to hospitalizations and deaths of millions of people. Public health interventions, such as risk estimators, can reduce the spread of pandemics and epidemics through influencing behavior, which impacts risk of exposure and infection. Current publicly available COVID-19 risk estimation tools have had variable effectiveness during the pandemic due to their dependency on rapidly evolving factors such as community transmission levels and variants. There has also been confusion surrounding certain personal protective strategies such as risk reduction by mask-wearing and vaccination. In order to create a simple easy-to-use tool for estimating different individual risks associated with carrying out daily-life activity, we developed COVID-19 Activity Risk Calculator (CovARC). CovARC is a gamified public health intervention as users can "play with" how different risks associated with COVID-19 can change depending on several different factors when carrying out routine daily activities. Empowering the public to make informed, data-driven decisions about safely engaging in activities may help to reduce COVID-19 levels in the community. In this study, we demonstrate a streamlined, scalable and accurate COVID-19 risk calculation system. Our study also demonstrates the quantitative impact of vaccination and mask-wearing during periods of high case counts. Validation of this impact could inform and support policy decisions regarding case thresholds for mask mandates, and other public health interventions.