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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Public Health and Surveillance

Date Submitted: Mar 8, 2023
Open Peer Review Period: Mar 7, 2023 - Mar 21, 2023
Date Accepted: Nov 21, 2023
(closed for review but you can still tweet)

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Development of New Stringency Indices for Nonpharmacological Social Distancing Policies Implemented in Korea During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Random Forest Approach

Apio C, Han K, Lee D, Lee B, Park T

Development of New Stringency Indices for Nonpharmacological Social Distancing Policies Implemented in Korea During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Random Forest Approach

JMIR Public Health Surveill 2024;10:e47099

DOI: 10.2196/47099

PMID: 38190233

PMCID: 10775907

Non-pharmacological policies implemented in Korea against COVID-19 aimed for physical distancing: Development of new stringency indices.

  • Catherine Apio; 
  • Kyulhee Han; 
  • Doeun Lee; 
  • Bogyeom Lee; 
  • Taesung Park

ABSTRACT

Background:

Background:

In the absence of an effective treatment method or vaccine, the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic elicited a wide range of unprecedented restriction policies aimed at mitigating and suppressing the spread of the SARS-COV-2 virus. These policies and their Stringency Index (SI) of more than 160 countries were systematically recorded in the Oxford COVID-19 Government Response Tracker (OxCGRT) dataset. The SI is a summary measure of the overall strictness of these policies. However, the OxCGRT SI may not fully reflect the stringency levels of the restriction policies implemented in Korea. Korea implemented 33 COVID-19 restriction policies targeting four areas: public facilities, public events, social gatherings, and religious gatherings.

Objective:

Objective:

We aimed to develop new Korea Stringency Indices (KSIs) reflecting the stringency levels of Korea’s restriction policies well and to determine which government-implemented policies were most effective in managing COVID-19 in Korea.

Methods:

Methods:

The random forest method was used to calculate the new KSIs using feature importance values and determine their effectiveness in managing daily COVID-19 confirmed cases. Five analysis periods were considered, including 2020.11.01 ~ 2021.01.20 (Period 1), 2021.01.20 ~ 2021.06.27 (Period 2), 2020.11.01 ~ 2021.06.27 (Period 3), 2021.06.27 ~ 2021.11.01 (Period 4), and 2021.11.01 ~ 2022.04.24 (Period 5).

Results:

Results:

Among the KSIs, public facilities in period 4, public events in period 2, religious gatherings in periods 1 and 3 and social gatherings in period 5 had the highest importance. Among the public facilities, policies associated with operation hour restrictions in cinemas, restaurants, PC rooms, indoor sports facilities, karaoke, coffee shops, night entertainment facilities, and baths/saunas had the highest importance across all analysis periods. Strong positive correlations were observed between public facilities, religious gatherings, and public events with daily confirmed cases in period 1 of the pandemic. From then, weaker and negative correlations were observed in the remaining analysis periods. The comparison with the OxCGRT SI showed that the SI had a relatively lower feature importance and correlation with daily confirmed cases than the proposed KSIs, making KSIs more effective than SI.

Conclusions:

Conclusions:

Restriction policies targeting public facilities were the most effective among the policies analyzed. Also, different periods call for enforcing different policies as their effectiveness varied during the pandemic.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Apio C, Han K, Lee D, Lee B, Park T

Development of New Stringency Indices for Nonpharmacological Social Distancing Policies Implemented in Korea During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Random Forest Approach

JMIR Public Health Surveill 2024;10:e47099

DOI: 10.2196/47099

PMID: 38190233

PMCID: 10775907

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