Table 1.
Events O, A and B for the three time delay quantities.
Table 2.
Results for the time from infection to hospitalisation, segmented by symptom onset date.
Table 3.
Results for the time from hospitalisation to death, segmented by hospitalisation date.
Table 4.
Results for the time from infection to death, segmented by symptom onset date.
Fig 1.
Bar charts of the times to clinical outcome by age and sex, with standard errors.
The data were filtered for dates between January 2020 to November 2020 and N on each bar represents the number of patients within each group.
Table 5.
Results for the time from infection to hospitalisation by sex and age.
Table 6.
Results for the time from hospitalisation to death by sex and age.
Table 7.
Results for the time from infection to death by sex and age.
Fig 2.
Violin plots of the best fit modelled distributions of times to clinical outcome over the course of the pandemic for category A.
The quartiles for each distribution are shown as dashed lines and the solid line corresponds to the mean. In this chart, the data are segmented in time by the former of the two events: symptom onset date for both infection to hospitalisation and infection to death, and hospitalisation date for hospitalisation to death. For the last time period (1 December 2020 to 20 January 2021), the right truncation equation was used. The mean time from infection to hospitalisation has remained relatively stable. For both hospitalisation to death and infection to death, the mean time was lowest in the first wave, and there was a marked increase over the summer months.
Fig 3.
Line graph of the relationship between healthcare pressure, as measured by daily hospital admissions, and the mean modelled clinical time delays.