Data di Pubblicazione:
2021
Abstract:
The COVID-19 epidemic forced authorities to implement lockdown policies to reduce the
spread of the disease and, as a consequence, the excess mortality. These policies encouraged
homeworking, hence reducing the number of commuters with the implicit assumption that
restricting human mobility reduces the risk of infection in areas of residence, work, and other
activities. Yet, the spatial relationship among different areas has been rarely addressed both in
the public discourse and in early accounts of the consequences of mortality in COVID-19 time
period. As shown in literature, the spatial regression models are useful to analyse phenomena
with non-stationarity variability in contrast to standard regression models.
By employing spatial regression models, the findings suggest that the higher the mobility
to places of residence, the higher the excess mortality. This increasing in mortality is not
homogeneous throughout the Italian provinces. Specifically, the variability in the mortality on
August 2020 compared to the average value on 2015-2019 period (baseline) is greater in the
Central-Southern provinces, due to the movements to the residence places in July 2020.
In conclusion, the spatial interactions between mobility and COVID-19 spread could
support the analysis about the relationship between excess mortality and socio-economic
settings, highlighting the importance of modelling spatial variability.
Tipologia CRIS:
14.a.1 Articolo su rivista
Keywords:
Mobility, Mortality, COVID-19, Spatial regression
Elenco autori:
Mucciardi, Massimo; Tomaselli, Venera
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