Id |
Subject |
Object |
Predicate |
Lexical cue |
T41 |
0-175 |
Sentence |
denotes |
As the epidemic continues to expand geographically, arrival screening will likely be continued or expanded to prevent importation of cases to areas without established spread. |
T42 |
176-401 |
Sentence |
denotes |
At the same time, there is great concern about potential public health consequences if COVID-19 spreads to developing countries that lack health infrastructure and resources to combat it effectively (de Salazar et al., 2020). |
T43 |
402-503 |
Sentence |
denotes |
Limited resources also could mean that some countries cannot implement large-scale arrival screening. |
T44 |
504-643 |
Sentence |
denotes |
In this scenario, departure screening implemented elsewhere would be the sole barrier -- however leaky -- to new waves of case importation. |
T45 |
644-947 |
Sentence |
denotes |
It is also important to recognize that, owing to the lag time in appearance of symptoms in imported cases, any weaknesses in screening would continue to have an effect on known case importations for up to two weeks, officially considered the maximum incubation period (World Health Organization, 2020c). |
T46 |
948-1078 |
Sentence |
denotes |
Accordingly, we consider scenarios with departure screening only, arrival screening only, or both departure and arrival screening. |
T47 |
1079-1291 |
Sentence |
denotes |
The model can also consider the consequences when only a fraction of the traveller population is screened, due either to travel from a location not subject to screening, or due to deliberate evasion of screening. |