Comparison of predictive models and impact assessment of lockdown for COVID-19 over the United States
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Date
Authors
Makinde, Olusola S.
Adeola, Abiodun Morakinyo
Abiodun, Gbenga J.
Olusola-Makinde, Olubukola O.
Alejandro, Aceves
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Atlantis Press International
Abstract
The novel Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) remains a worldwide threat to community health, social stability, and
economic development. Since the first case was recorded on December 29, 2019, in Wuhan of China, the disease has rapidly
extended to other nations of the world to claim many lives, especially in the USA, the United Kingdom, and Western Europe. To
stay ahead of the curve consequent of the continued increase in case and mortality, predictive tools are needed to guide adequate
response. Therefore, this study aims to determine the best predictive models and investigate the impact of lockdown policy
on the USA’ COVID-19 incidence and mortality. This study focuses on the statistical modelling of the USA daily COVID-19
incidence and mortality cases based on some intuitive properties of the data such as overdispersion and autoregressive conditional
heteroscedasticity. The impact of the lockdown policy on cases and mortality was assessed by comparing the USA incidence case
with that of Sweden where there is no strict lockdown. Stochastic models based on negative binomial autoregressive conditional
heteroscedasticity [NB INGARCH (p,q)], the negative binomial regression, the autoregressive integrated moving average model
with exogenous variables (ARIMAX) and without exogenous variables (ARIMA) models of several orders are presented, to
identify the best fitting model for the USA daily incidence cases. The performance of the optimal NB INGARCH model on
daily incidence cases was compared with the optimal ARIMA model in terms of their Akaike Information Criteria (AIC). Also,
the NB model, ARIMA model and without exogenous variables are formulated for USA daily COVID-19 death cases. It was
observed that the incidence and mortality cases show statistically significant increasing trends over the study period. The USA
daily COVID-19 incidence is autocorrelated, linear and contains a structural break but exhibits autoregressive conditional
heteroscedasticity. Observed data are compared with the fitted data from the optimal models. The results further indicate that
the NB INGARCH fits the observed incidence better than ARIMA while the NB models perform better than the optimal ARIMA
and ARIMAX models for death counts in terms of AIC and root mean square error (RMSE). The results show a statistically
significant relationship between the lockdown policy in the USA and incidence and death counts. This suggests the efficacy of
the lockdown policy in the USA.
Description
Keywords
INGARCH, Negative binomial, ARIMA, Lockdown policy, COVID-19 pandemic, Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), United States of America (USA)
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Makinde, O.S., Adeola, A.M., Abiodun, G.J. et al. 2021, 'Comparison of predictive models and impact assessment of lockdown for COVID-19 over the United States', Journal of Epidemiology and Global Health, vol. 11, no. 2, pp. 200-207.