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The Viral Explosion: A State-Wise Projection Map For Covid-19 In India

  • State level granularity of predictions is now a necessity. The current lock-down situation has fragmented the Indian population into clusters of sub-populations.

Santosh Ansumali and Aloke Kumar Mar 25, 2020, 07:46 PM | Updated 07:46 PM IST
Healthcare workers in Kerala wearing PPE (Wikimedia Commons) 

Healthcare workers in Kerala wearing PPE (Wikimedia Commons) 


As the world grapples to deal with novel strain of Coronavirus (now called SARS-COV-2; it causes the disease Covid-19), critical health-services have been the first service-sector calamity. Inability to properly predict the rate of spread of infection and how it will burden the healthcare sector seems to have been a major stumbling block for policymakers.

In a situation like this, it is imperative that predictive models specific to India are designed and developed.

Unlike pan-India models, in the one presented below by the authors, the current lockdown scenario allows one to consider Indian states (and union territories) as separate entities and this can have significant policy implications.

In fact, a state level granularity of predictions is now a necessity as the current lock-down situation has fragmented the Indian population into clusters of sub-populations, which are expected to follow trend-lines already witnessed in other nations.

We present a heuristic predictive model that captures the essential trend-lines from open-source data from other nations. Simply-speaking a heuristic model in this case is a statistical rule-based model, which captures the essential aspects of how the viral disease spreads in a large cluster of population, as it is unfurling in the world now.

The model offers a state-wise analysis, which throws up several interesting features of the pandemic wave in India.

The pandemic wave will hit different states at different times. So, state-wise projection will allow for the most optimal resource planning.

The differences in state-wise projections also bring into question whether India should have a national virtual war room to monitor and co-ordinate between states.

The heuristic algorithm has also been coded into GUI interface – we will come back to this once we explain our essential model.

The Model

Our heuristic model has a prediction horizon of four weeks starting from 24 March (Tuesday).

The infected patient data is sourced from the Government of India database.

The current lockdown situation enables us to consider each state as a sub-population, which is expected to follow a trend-line already witnessed in another nation.

Before we discuss various aspects of the model, we must consider whether India’s numbers are under-reported.

Under-reporting can occur due to several reasons such as the fact that a large fraction of carriers can remain asymptomatic and thus are very unlikely to get tested.

Under-reporting can also occur when testing is either not easily available or is restricted.

Thus, to account for under-reporting we introduce an ‘inflation factor’ in our model (variable name: n). An inflation factor of five implies that for every reported infection, there are five unreported infections.

It is a gross parameter, which accounts for contributions from both asymptomatic cases and under-reporting and hence must be a value greater than unity.

However, unlike infections, death due to the disease is an observable quantity. Since, number of deaths is a function of infections, a very high inflation factor (say 10) value would imply that the disease is not very fatal.

In fact, a bound on the inflation factor can be placed by considering reported death rates in India and the number of deaths seen by other nations when they were in a similar period of the pandemic wave.

In our realistic model, we posit an inflation factor value of three for large states and a value of two for smaller states.

Another important parameter that governs the relevant statistics in our heuristic model is the weekly infection growth rate.

Order of magnitude estimates for weekly growth rates can be estimated from open-source data. Since our prediction horizon is only four weeks, for which open-source trend-lines are available – the values of the multipliers have been fixed.

The four-week rates are likely to have the highest uncertainty, and we considered our lowest and highest rates to mimic those in China and Italy over the four weeks after their first regional lockdowns were announced, with the selected rate being closer to Italy than to China (which may have had stricter lockdowns than elsewhere in the world).

Finally, the model must estimate the number of people who need critical care.

An important peculiarity of the Covid-19 is the fact that the elderly or people with previous conditions often require critical care via ventilators. So, number of people requiring critical care seems  to be significant for Covid-19.

Generally, most countries are ill-prepared for a surge in ventilator demand. However, India, with approximately 30 to 50 thousand ventilators for more than one billion people is even more ill-prepared for such a demand surge.

Here, we must note that occupancy rate for ventilators is often extremely high in India due to a large population. Thus, it will be highly surprising if the country can spare even five thousand ventilators for Covid-19 purposes.

The plight of Italy shows that before an upsurge happens, the country should perform a demand and supply forecast of the critical care equipment such as ventilators, oxygen cylinders.  This planning is crucial.

The fraction of Covid-19 patients, who will require such critical care can be estimated in two different ways.

One line of argument notes that India has roughly 10 per cent of population above 60. Assuming that the disease also strikes proportionately, elderly population will make 10 per cent of the patients.

Further, among the younger population also, those with prior medical condition might require critical care. Assuming that around 15 per cent of the infected people will require critical care is a reasonable upper bound.

Another way to estimate this number is to consider the expected death toll from Covid-19 and assume that the number of people requiring critical care is going to be around order one multiple of this estimate.

Global experience so far suggests that death rate is unusually high (around 10 per cent in some cases) for elderly and very low for young. Thus, India being a relative young country with median age of around 27 will have a lower death toll than other places.

Thus, one may expect that the death rate in India will be sub five per cent. Thus, critical care requirement should be sub-15 per cent.

Using the above arguments, we ran our heuristic model for each State of India.

Prediction data for six representative cases is shown in the table here.

We consider two States which are in the ‘early surge’ category and three States in the ‘later surge’ category and Ladakh as a special case (due to its small population).

For all these States, we present pessimistic estimates and also what we consider to be realistic estimates of critical care patients.

Number of infected persons are shown for moderate case-worst case scenarios

Number of critically ill patients are shown for moderate case-worst case scenarios

Interactive Interface

This heuristic model has been coded into an interactive interface where users can explore the impact of different assumptions/situations.

The interactive interface is available at https://mesoscalelab.github.io/covid19/.

We invite people to try and use this interface and come up with their own predictions for critical care patients for their state. Tag us on Twitter and explain whether you agree with our predictions. If you do not agree, then feel free to share the rationale for your assumptions.

Policy outlook:

An important outcome of this quantification exercise is the fact that a crisis emerging out of an epidemic or a pandemic for countries as large as India typically does not strike in a short time span.

The pandemic can have a distributed nature rather than being concentrated.

The dispersed nature of the pandemic allows the planning of relief, mitigation measures, infrastructure enhancement etc.

However, one can achieve this only if policy makers and administrators at all level share information in real-time with stake-holders. This can be done through war-rooms.

In our understanding cities like Bengaluru have already planned their war room. However, a national war-room has not yet been created.

We feel such a national-level virtual war room for such epidemics is the need of the hour and should be done on an urgent basis.

War-rooms should be created in every State and also at the central level to monitor, co-ordinate and advise local admin. Moreover, distributed clusters of critical care biomedical instrumentation and its associated supply chain be setup.

It is important to create clusters since these equipment need trained personnel to operate and clusters can operate training/distribution/redistribution centres. These clusters should be adequately dispersed so that they attain maximum coverage without getting overwhelmed.

Crowd-sourcing solutions:

Considering the fact that a careful management of disaster requires dissemination of information to both public as well as policy makers, there has been a remarkable silence on plans for the surge.

This silence prompted a crowd-sourced effort called ‘Caring Indians’ (http://caringindians.com/) spear-headed by Mr. Rahul Raj (Inverted Energy Pvt. Ltd.) and Prof. Amitabha Bandyopadhyay (IIT Kanpur) and Prof. Santosh Ansumali (JNCASR).

The crowd-sourced platform brought together a large group of technical work-force which identified key components of a surge response.

The group identified a number of tasks which needs to be urgently taken up such as a disaster management platform with a virtual war room for epidemic spread, low-cost ventilators etc. This heuristic map was created essentially to co-ordinate and complement the efforts of this group.

These efforts may or may not fructify in the long run. However, this spirit of collaboration among all stakeholders is something to celebrate.

Moreover, it shows that crowd-sourced systems can mount a rapid response to challenges that might be too difficult for a state to handle on its own.

The article expresses the personal opinion of the authors.

The authors would like to acknowledge contributions of Dr. Soumyadeep Bhattacharya and Shaurya Kaushal (PhD student at JNCASR) in developing the website and the models. The authors would also like to acknowledge the help of Sunil Sherlekar (Sankhya Sutra Labs), Dr. P. Sunthar (IIT Bombay) and Dr.  Dr. Rahul Tyagi (Washington University in St. Louis, USA) for helpful discussions.

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