INTRODUCTION On March 11, 2020, WHO declared COVID-19 a pandemic and called on governments to impose drastic measures to fight it. It is vitally important for government health authorities and leaders to have reliable estimates of infected cases and deaths in order to apply the necessary measures with the resources at their disposal.
OBJECTIVE Test the validity of the logistic regression and Gompertz curve to forecast peaks of confirmed cases and deaths in Cuba, as well as total number of cases.
METHODS An inferential, predictive study was conducted using logistic and Gompertz growth curves, adjusted with the least squares method and informatics tools for analysis and prediction of growth in COVID-19 cases and deaths. Italy and Spain—countries that have passed the initial peak of infection rates—were studied, and it was inferred from the results of these countries that their models were applicable to Cuba. This hypothesis was tested by applying goodness-of-fit and significance tests on its parameters.
RESULTS Both models showed good fit, low mean square errors, and all parameters were highly significant.
CONCLUSIONS The validity of models was confirmed based on logistic regression and the Gompertz curve to forecast the dates of peak infections and deaths, as well as total number of cases in Cuba.
KEYWORDS COVID-19, SARS-CoV-2, logistic models, pandemic, mortality, Cuba