Estimating the SARS-CoV-2 infected population fraction and the infection-to-fatality ratio: a data-driven case study based on Swedish time series data
Journal article, 2021

We demonstrate that finite impulse response (FIR) models can be applied to analyze the time evolution of an epidemic with its impact on deaths and healthcare strain. Using time series data for COVID-19-related cases, ICU admissions and deaths from Sweden, the FIR model gives a consistent epidemiological trajectory for a simple delta filter function. This results in a consistent scaling between the time series if appropriate time delays are applied and allows the reconstruction of cases for times before July 2020, when RT-PCR testing was not widely available. Combined with randomized RT-PCR study results, we utilize this approach to estimate the total number of infections in Sweden, and the corresponding infection-to-fatality ratio (IFR), infection-to-case ratio (ICR), and infection-to-ICU admission ratio (IIAR). Our values for IFR, ICR and IIAR are essentially constant over large parts of 2020 in contrast with claims of healthcare adaptation or mutated virus variants importantly affecting these ratios. We observe a diminished IFR in late summer 2020 as well as a strong decline during 2021, following the launch of a nation-wide vaccination program. The total number of infections during 2020 is estimated to 1.3 million, indicating that Sweden was far from herd immunity.

Author

Andreas Wacker

Lund University

Anna Jöud

Lund University

Bo Bernhardsson

Department of Automatic Control

Philip Gerlee

Chalmers, Mathematical Sciences, Applied Mathematics and Statistics

University of Gothenburg

F. Gustafsson

Linköping University

Kristian Soltesz

Department of Automatic Control

Scientific Reports

2045-2322 (ISSN) 20452322 (eISSN)

Vol. 11 1 23963

Subject Categories

Probability Theory and Statistics

Public Health, Global Health, Social Medicine and Epidemiology

DOI

10.1038/s41598-021-03269-w

More information

Latest update

12/30/2021