The Korean clusters
How coronavirus cases exploded in South Korean churches and hospitals
South
Korea announced thousands of coronavirus cases in the space of only a
few days in late February. The surge in cases centred mostly around one
main cluster from a church in Daegu city. The outbreak initially pushed
South Korea’s tally of confirmed cases much higher than anywhere else
outside of China and cases there have continued to rise since.
The
virus was first confirmed in the country on Jan. 20 when a 35-year-old
Chinese woman who flew from Wuhan, China to Incheon international
airport, which serves Seoul, was isolated upon entry into the country.
In the four weeks following the incident, South Korea managed to avoid a
major outbreak with only 30 people contracting the virus, despite many
interactions between those later confirmed as being sick and hundreds
more people being identified as contacts of the sick patients.
https://graphics.reuters.com/CHINA-HEALTH-SOUTHKOREA-CLUSTERS/0100B5G33SB/index.html?fbclid=IwAR3k7e-zXYSDBzEc5S0MwJqkzuqmRdjuxsdw8VBkHPR6KznhREGc68U3xtA
El modelo SEIRV aplicado a la epidemia de coronavirus en Wuhan, China
Por Francisco R. Villatoro,https://francis.naukas.com/2020/03/14/el-modelo-seirv-aplicado-a-la-epidemia-de-coronavirus-en-wuhan-china/?fbclid=IwAR37MZcWwmV9l_LY6M5fWaNtSC6JftMZkFfNgIyQrsljtN40jTFItZBc2D4
Mapping the Social Network of Coronavirus
To slow the virus, Alessandro Vespignani and other analysts are racing to model the behavior of its human host.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/13/science/coronavirus-social-networks-data.html?smid=fb-nytscience&smtyp=cur&fbclid=IwAR1kiqPyncGpXW_0d6xVNfgnC_IHM8A9mt4WxrFxL6tzh9mJO3PstwxyNN4
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