@article {1339, title = {The relationship between human mobility and viral transmissibility during the COVID-19 epidemics in Italy}, journal = {arXiv preprint arXiv:2006.03141}, year = {2020}, abstract = {We describe in this report our studies to understand the relationship between human mobility and the spreading of COVID-19, as an aid to manage the restart of the social and economic activities after the lockdown and monitor the epidemics in the coming weeks and months. We compare the evolution (from January to May 2020) of the daily mobility flows in Italy, measured by means of nation-wide mobile phone data, and the evolution of transmissibility, measured by the net reproduction number, i.e., the mean number of secondary infections generated by one primary infector in the presence of control interventions and human behavioural adaptations. We find a striking relationship between the negative variation of mobility flows and the net reproduction number, in all Italian regions, between March 11th and March 18th, when the country entered the lockdown. This observation allows us to quantify the time needed to "switch off" the country mobility (one week) and the time required to bring the net reproduction number below 1 (one week). A reasonably simple regression model provides evidence that the net reproduction number is correlated with a region{\textquoteright}s incoming, outgoing and internal mobility. We also find a strong relationship between the number of days above the epidemic threshold before the mobility flows reduce significantly as an effect of lockdowns, and the total number of confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infections per 100k inhabitants, thus indirectly showing the effectiveness of the lockdown and the other non-pharmaceutical interventions in the containment of the contagion. Our study demonstrates the value of "big" mobility data to the monitoring of key epidemic indicators to inform choices as the epidemics unfolds in the coming months.}, url = {https://arxiv.org/abs/2006.03141}, author = {Paolo Cintia and Daniele Fadda and Fosca Giannotti and Luca Pappalardo and Giulio Rossetti and Dino Pedreschi and S Rinzivillo and Bonato, Pietro and Fabbri, Francesco and Penone, Francesco and Savarese, Marcello and Checchi, Daniele and Chiaromonte, Francesca and Vineis , Paolo and Guzzetta, Giorgio and Riccardo, Flavia and Marziano, Valentina and Poletti, Piero and Trentini, Filippo and Bella, Antonio and Andrianou, Xanthi and Del Manso, Martina and Fabiani, Massimo and Bellino, Stefania and Boros, Stefano and Mateo Urdiales, Alberto and Vescio, Maria Fenicia and Brusaferro, Silvio and Rezza, Giovanni and Pezzotti, Patrizio and Ajelli, Marco and Merler, Stefano} }