id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-320145-582kmoyo Cardinal, R. N. Simulating a community mental health service during the COVID-19 pandemic: effects of clinician-clinician encounters, clinician-patient-family encounters, symptom-triggered protective behaviour, and household clustering 2020-05-03 .txt text/plain 5484 317 46 title: Simulating a community mental health service during the COVID-19 pandemic: effects of clinician-clinician encounters, clinician-patient-family encounters, symptom-triggered protective behaviour, and household clustering We also varied clinician-clinician contact; baseline and ongoing "external" infection rates; whether overt symptoms reduced transmission risk behaviourally (e.g. via personal protective equipment, PPE); and household clustering. Appointment type and inter-clinician contact had greater effects at low external infection rates and without a behavioural symptom response. In Experiment 1, whole-population infection was dominated by baseline and external infection rates (with infection spreading primarily via intra-household contacts), plus the behavioural response to symptoms (all p⋘α), with only very small contributions from the appointment type and clinician-clinician meetings (Figure 2A) . The beneficial effects of symptom-triggered behaviour were proportionally greater with lower external infection rates, for higher-risk appointment types, and without clinician meetings. ./cache/cord-320145-582kmoyo.txt ./txt/cord-320145-582kmoyo.txt