Selected article for: "epidemic transmission and important role play"

Author: Cauchemez, Simon; Hoze, Nathanaël; Cousien, Anthony; Nikolay, Birgit; ten bosch, Quirine
Title: How Modelling Can Enhance the Analysis of Imperfect Epidemic Data
  • Cord-id: tysa2b5x
  • Document date: 2019_2_6
  • ID: tysa2b5x
    Snippet: Mathematical models play an increasingly important role in our understanding of the transmission and control of infectious diseases. Here, we present concrete examples illustrating how mathematical models, paired with rigorous statistical methods, are used to parse data of different levels of detail and breadth and estimate key epidemiological parameters (e.g., transmission and its determinants, severity, impact of interventions, drivers of epidemic dynamics) even when these parameters are not d
    Document: Mathematical models play an increasingly important role in our understanding of the transmission and control of infectious diseases. Here, we present concrete examples illustrating how mathematical models, paired with rigorous statistical methods, are used to parse data of different levels of detail and breadth and estimate key epidemiological parameters (e.g., transmission and its determinants, severity, impact of interventions, drivers of epidemic dynamics) even when these parameters are not directly measurable, when data are limited, and when the epidemic process is only partially observed. Finally, we assess the hurdles to be taken to increase availability and applicability of these approaches in an effort to ultimately enhance their public health impact.

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