C
Caroline Benski
Researcher at University of Geneva
Publications - 2
Citations - 39
Caroline Benski is an academic researcher from University of Geneva. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Population. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 2 publications receiving 6 citations.
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Mobility restrictions were associated with reductions in COVID-19 incidence early in the pandemic: evidence from a real-time evaluation in 34 countries.
Juhwan Oh,Hwa Young Lee,Quynh Long Khuong,Jeffrey F. Markuns,Chris Bullen,Osvaldo Enrique Artaza Barrios,Seung Sik Hwang,Young Sahng Suh,Judith McCool,S. Patrick Kachur,Chang-Chuan Chan,Soonman Kwon,Naoki Kondo,Van Minh Hoang,J. Robin Moon,Mikael Rostila,Ole Frithjof Norheim,Myoungsoon You,Mellissa Withers,Mu Li,Eun-Jeung Lee,Caroline Benski,Soo Kyung Park,Eun Woo Nam,Katie Gottschalk,Matthew M. Kavanagh,Thi Giang Huong Tran,Jong Koo Lee,S. V. Subramanian,Martin McKee,Lawrence O. Gostin +30 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the association between changes in mobility and the ratio of the newly confirmed cases on a given day to the total number of cases over the past 14 days from the index day (the potentially infective 'pool' in that population), per million population, using LOESS regression and logit regression.
Journal ArticleDOI
How well does societal mobility restriction help control the COVID-19 pandemic? Evidence from real-time evaluation
Juhwan Oh,Juhwan Oh,Hwa Young Lee,Hwa Young Lee,Khuong Quynh Long,Jeffery F Marcuns,Chris Bullen,Osvaldo Enrique Artaza Barrios,Seung Sik Hwang,Young Sahng Suh,Judith McCool,S. Patrick Kaucher,Chang-Chung Chan,Soonman Kwon,Naoki Kondo,Hoang Van Minh,J. Robin Moon,Mikael Rostila,Ole Frithjof Norheim,Ole Frithjof Norheim,Myoungsoon You,Mellissa Withers,Mu Li,Eun-Jeung Lee,Caroline Benski,Soo Kyung Park,Eun-Woo Nam,Katie Gottschalk,Matthew M. Kavanagh,Tran Thi Giang Huong,Jong Koo Lee,S. V. Subramanian,Lawrence O. Gostin,Martin McKee +33 more
TL;DR: The association between change in mobility and incidence of COVID-19 globally using real-time measures of mobility at the population level is investigated, finding that associations between mobility restriction and incidence became smaller or negligible in the late phase of the pandemic in most countries.