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Cited 5 time in webofscience Cited 4 time in scopus
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Density or Connectivity: What Are the Main Causes of the Spatial Proliferation of COVID-19 in Korea?open access

Authors
Jo, YunHong, AndySung, Hyungun
Issue Date
May-2021
Publisher
MDPI
Keywords
COVID-19; spatial proliferation; density; connectivity; social network analysis; negative binomial regression
Citation
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, v.18, no.10, pp.1 - 16
Indexed
SCIE
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH
Volume
18
Number
10
Start Page
1
End Page
16
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/141950
DOI
10.3390/ijerph18105084
ISSN
1661-7827
Abstract
COVID-19 has sparked a debate on the vulnerability of densely populated cities. Some studies argue that high-density urban centers are more vulnerable to infectious diseases due to a higher chance of infection in crowded urban environments. Other studies, however, argue that connectivity rather than population density plays a more significant role in the spread of COVID-19. While several studies have examined the role of urban density and connectivity in Europe and the U.S., few studies have been conducted in Asian countries. This study aims to investigate the role of urban spatial structure on COVID-19 by comparing different measures of urban density and connectivity during the first eight months of the outbreak in Korea. Two measures of density were derived from the Korean census, and four measures of connectivity were computed using social network analysis of the Origin-Destination data from the 2020 Korea Transport Database. We fitted both OLS and negative binomial models to the number of confirmed COVID-19 patients and its infection rates at the county level, collected individually from regional government websites in Korea. Results show that both density and connectivity play an important role in the proliferation of the COVID-19 outbreak in Korea. However, we found that the connectivity measure, particularly a measure of network centrality, was a better indicator of COVID-19 proliferation than the density measures. Our findings imply that policies that take into account different types of connectivity between cities might be necessary to contain the outbreak in the early phase.
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GRADUATE SCHOOL OF URBAN STUDIES (DEPARTMENT OF URBAN AND REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT)
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