
@article{ref1,
title="Associations between mobility patterns and COVID-19 deaths during the pandemic: a network structure and rank propagation modelling approach",
journal="Array (New York, N.Y.)",
year="2021",
author="Irini, Furxhi and Kia, Arash Negahdari and Shannon, Darren and Jannusch, Tim and Murphy, Finbarr and Sheehan, Barry",
volume="11",
number="",
pages="e100075-e100075",
abstract="BACKGROUND: From February 2020, both urban and rural Ireland witnessed the rapid proliferation of the COVID-19 disease throughout its counties. During this period, the national COVID-19 responses included stay-at-home directives issued by the state, subject to varying levels of enforcement. <br><br>METHODS: In this paper, we present a new method to assess and rank the causes of Ireland COVID-19 deaths as it relates to mobility activities within each county provided by Google while taking into consideration the epidemiological confirmed positive cases reported per county. We used a network structure and rank propagation modelling approach using Personalised PageRank to reveal the importance of each mobility category linked to cases and deaths. Then a novel feature-selection method using relative prominent factors finds important features related to each county's death. Finally, we clustered the counties based on features selected with the network results using a customised network clustering algorithm for the research problem. <br><br>FINDINGS: Our analysis reveals that the most important mobility trend categories that exhibit the strongest association to COVID-19 cases and deaths include retail and recreation and workplaces. This is the first time a network structure and rank propagation modelling approach has been used to link COVID-19 data to mobility patterns. The infection determinants landscape illustrated by the network results aligns soundly with county socio-economic and demographic features. The novel feature selection and clustering method presented clusters useful to policymakers, managers of the health sector, politicians and even sociologists. Finally, each county has a different impact on the national total.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="2590-0056",
doi="10.1016/j.array.2021.100075",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.array.2021.100075"
}