Retrospective Evaluation of the Effectiveness of COVID-19 Control Strategies Implemented by the Victorian Government in Melbourne—A Proposal for a Standardized Approach to Review and Reappraise Control Measures
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Method
3. Results
3.1. Lockdown 1
3.2. Lockdown 2
3.3. Lockdown 3
3.4. Lockdown 4
3.5. Lockdown 5
3.6. Lockdown 6
4. Discussion
- If the effective phase starts before or on the day the control measure is introduced, there is no causal connection between the control measure and the initiation of the effective phase.
- If the effective phase starts within one average SI after the day the control measure is introduced, there is an unlikely causal connection as the relationship between epidemiological indicators of infection cannot be an immediate one due to the serial interval (SI).
- If the effective phase starts between the end of SI and the following 5 days, there is very likely a connection.
- If the effective phase starts after the end of one SI + 5 days, there is an unclear connection, depending on the circumstances, which could be interpreted as a severe delay of the intervention’s effect, or even as an unsuccessful effect not entirely connected to the intervention, considering that relaxed measures (comparable to the ones introduced in Sweden) also initiated the effective phase.
- (1)
- First, we have the advantage of being able to rely on data rather than belief. The acceleration data provide stronger evidence of the causal relationship between measures and data changes than the Reff.
- (2)
- Second, even if the onset of the effect occurs at the expected time, there is always some probability that the apparent association is not real (and, rather, an illusion) if the latent factor mentioned above, explaining the flattening of the curve without control measures, outweighs all of the other control measures (i.e., self-imposed compliance rather than government-imposed compliance).
- (1)
- They were introduced too late, with effects expected towards the end, or even after the end, of the effective phase.
- (2)
- Alternatively, if introduced before the start of the effective phase, the compliance was poor. Murphy et al. [31] investigated the compliance of Australian citizens during the first lockdown, and they concluded that it was as low as 50% due to citizens socialising in-person with friends or relatives they did not live with and also leaving the house without a good reason.
- (1)
- The causal relationship between the control measure and the start of effectiveness is construed by circumstantial evidence. This evidence fails if the latent factor mentioned above could have prepared the flattening of the curve over a longer period of time, so that a timely and quickly initiated control measure cannot do much to help.
- (2)
- The evaluation of a control measure with regard to its effectiveness, based on the method proposed in this study, is only a retrospective, and, therefore, it cannot be used for forecasting. It is thus not surprising that the timing of a control measure can fail in the sense that it is introduced too late and therefore proves ineffective. The reason that the method is a retrospective method is explained by the window width of the 13 data applied to the daily case data (velocity) filtering with a running quadratic filter. The optimal window width of 13 data was determined from a convergence test [11].
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Control Measure | Date | Timing | Effect |
---|---|---|---|
Stage 1 restrictions Stage 2 restrictions | 23 March 2020 26 March 2020 | Did not initiate the effective phase | Likely supporting the second half of the effective phase |
Lockdown 1 | 31 March 2020 | Introduced too late; effect expected after effective phase; and did not flatten the curve | NONE |
Stage 3 restrictions | 1 July 2020 | Did not initiate the effective phase; did not flatten the curve | Acceleration did not increase further but was constant on average |
Lockdown 2, Stage 3 | 9 July 2020 | Did not initiate the effective phase or reduce the constant acceleration; and did not flatten the curve | NONE |
Mask Mandate | 23 July 2020 | Initiated the effective phase | Flattened the curve, likely in combination with preceding measures |
Lockdown 2, Stage 4 | 3 August 2020 | Introduced too late; effect expected at end of effective phase; and did not flatten the curve | NONE |
Lockdown 3 | 13 February 2021 | Introduced too late; effect expected after effective phase; and did not flatten the curve | NONE |
Lockdown 4 | 28 May 2021 | Introduced too late; effect expected after effective phase; and did not flatten the curve | Likely supported faster return to zero cases after the effective phase |
Lockdown 5 | 16 July 2021 | Introduced too late; effect expected in 2nd half of effective phase but invisible; and did not flatten the curve | NONE |
Lockdown 6 (curfew, permits) | 5 August 2021 17 August 2021 | Introduced far before the effective phase; did not flatten the curve | NONE |
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Fuss, F.K.; Tan, A.M.; Weizman, Y. Retrospective Evaluation of the Effectiveness of COVID-19 Control Strategies Implemented by the Victorian Government in Melbourne—A Proposal for a Standardized Approach to Review and Reappraise Control Measures. COVID 2023, 3, 1063-1078. https://doi.org/10.3390/covid3080078
Fuss FK, Tan AM, Weizman Y. Retrospective Evaluation of the Effectiveness of COVID-19 Control Strategies Implemented by the Victorian Government in Melbourne—A Proposal for a Standardized Approach to Review and Reappraise Control Measures. COVID. 2023; 3(8):1063-1078. https://doi.org/10.3390/covid3080078
Chicago/Turabian StyleFuss, Franz Konstantin, Adin Ming Tan, and Yehuda Weizman. 2023. "Retrospective Evaluation of the Effectiveness of COVID-19 Control Strategies Implemented by the Victorian Government in Melbourne—A Proposal for a Standardized Approach to Review and Reappraise Control Measures" COVID 3, no. 8: 1063-1078. https://doi.org/10.3390/covid3080078
APA StyleFuss, F. K., Tan, A. M., & Weizman, Y. (2023). Retrospective Evaluation of the Effectiveness of COVID-19 Control Strategies Implemented by the Victorian Government in Melbourne—A Proposal for a Standardized Approach to Review and Reappraise Control Measures. COVID, 3(8), 1063-1078. https://doi.org/10.3390/covid3080078