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ESTIMATING ASYMPTOMATIC AND SYMPTOMATIC TRANSMISSION OF NOVEL CORONAVIRUS DISEASE 2019 IN SELENGE PROVINCE, MONGOLIA
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  • Davaalkham Dambadarjaa,
  • Tsogt Mend,
  • Andrew Shapiro,
  • Undram Mandakh,
  • Temuulen Enebish,
  • Linh-Vi Le,
  • Darwin Bandoy,
  • Ambaselmaa Amarjargal,
  • Bilegt Altangerel,
  • Tuvshintur Chuluunbaatar,
  • Uugantsetseg Guruuchin,
  • Oyuntulkhuur Lkhagvajav,
  • Oyunsuren Enebish,
  • Mark Handcock,
  • j.baigalmaa
Davaalkham Dambadarjaa
Mongolian National University of Medical Sciences
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Tsogt Mend
National Center for Communicable Diseases
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Andrew Shapiro
University of California Los Angeles
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Undram Mandakh
Mongolian National University of Medical Sciences

Corresponding Author:undram@mnums.edu.mn

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Temuulen Enebish
World Health Organization Regional Office for the Western Pacific
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Linh-Vi Le
World Health Organization Regional Office for the Western Pacific
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Darwin Bandoy
World Health Organization Regional Office for the Western Pacific
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Ambaselmaa Amarjargal
National Center for Communicable Diseases
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Bilegt Altangerel
National Center for Communicable Diseases
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Tuvshintur Chuluunbaatar
National Center for Communicable Diseases
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Uugantsetseg Guruuchin
National Center for Communicable Diseases
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Oyuntulkhuur Lkhagvajav
National Center for Communicable Diseases
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Oyunsuren Enebish
Mongolia Ministry of Health
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Mark Handcock
University of California Los Angeles
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j.baigalmaa
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Abstract

Background: Following a locally transmitted case in Sukhbaatar city, Selenge province, we conducted a study with two objectives. First, we aimed to estimate the basic reproduction number of COVID-19, leveraging the epidemiological and clinical characteristics observed in the first 67 confirmed cases. Second, we aimed to model the outbreak considering different patient profiles - asymptomatic, symptomatic, and pre-symptomatic - with the goal of predicting the ultimate scale of the epidemic in the scenario of uninterrupted transmission. Methods: We conducted a prospective case study following the WHO FFX cases generic protocol. The rapid response teams collected the surveillance data from November 14–29, 2020. We created a stochastic process to draw many transmission chains from this greater distribution to better understand and make inferences regarding the outbreak under investigation. Results: The majority of the cases involved household transmissions (35, 52.2%), work transmissions (20, 29.9%), index (5, 7.5%), same apartment transmissions (2, 3.0%), school transmissions (2, 3.0%), and meetup transmissions (1, 1.5%). The posterior means of the basic reproduction number of both the asymptomatic cases, R_0^Asy and pre-symptomatic cases R_0^Pre (1·35 [95% CrI 0·88−1·86] and 1·29 [95% CrI 0·67−2·10], respectively), were lower than that of the symptomatic cases. Conclusion: Our study highlights the heterogeneity of COVID-19 transmission across different symptom statuses and underscores the importance of early identification and isolation of symptomatic cases in disease control. Detailed contact tracing data with advanced statistical methods, can be applied to other infectious diseases, facilitating a more nuanced understanding of disease transmission dynamics.
18 Jul 2023Submitted to Influenza and other respiratory viruses
20 Jul 2023Submission Checks Completed
20 Jul 2023Assigned to Editor
24 Jul 2023Reviewer(s) Assigned
05 Nov 2023Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
11 Nov 2023Editorial Decision: Revise Minor
23 Feb 2024Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
27 Feb 2024Editorial Decision: Accept