Eguchi, A., Yoneoka, D., Shi, S., Tanoue, Y., Kawashima, T., Nomura, S., Matsuura, K., Makiyama, K., Ejima, K., Gilmour, S., Nishiura, H., and Miyata, H.
The Japanese prime minister declared a state of emergency on April 7 2020 to combat the outbreak of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). This declaration was unique in the sense that it was essentially driven by the voluntary restraint of the residents. We examined the change of the infection route by investigating contact experiences with COVID-19–positive cases. This study is a population-level questionnaire-based study using a social networking service (SNS). To assess the impact of the declaration, this study used population-level questionnaire data collected from an SNS with 121,375 respondents (between March 27 and May 5) to assess the change in transmission routes over the study period, which was measured by investigating the association between COVID-19–related symptoms and (self-reported) contact with COVID-19–infected individuals. The results of this study show that the declaration prevented infections in the workplace, but increased domestic infections as people stayed at home. However, after April 24, workplace infections started to increase again, driven by the increase in community-acquired infections. While careful interpretation is necessary because our data are self-reported from voluntary SNS users, these findings indicate the impact of the declaration on the change in transmission routes of COVID-19 over time in Japan. • After a weak lockdown, the transmission route of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)–related symptoms changed. • COVID-19 monitoring responses from more than 120,000 social networking service users in Japan were used for analysis. • The emergency declaration prevented infections in the workplace and increased domestic infections. • Even lockdown with limited enforcement may prevent the spread of infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]