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Defining high-value information for COVID-19 decision-making | |
COVID-19 Statistics, Policy modeling, and Epidemiology Collective. Salomon Joshua A. | |
Acceso Abierto | |
Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas | |
10.1101/2020.04.06.20052506 | |
Initial projections from the first generation of COVID-19 models focused public attention on worst-case scenarios in the absence of decisive policy action. These underscored the imperative for strong and immediate measures to slow the spread of infection. In the coming weeks, however, as policymakers continue enlisting models to inform decisions on COVID-19, answers to the most difficult and pressing policy questions will be much more sensitive to underlying uncertainties. In this study, we demonstrate a model-based approach to assessing the potential value of reducing critical uncertainties most salient to COVID-19 decision-making and discuss priorities for acquiring new data to reduce these uncertainties. We demonstrate how information about the impact of non-pharmaceutical interventions could narrow prediction intervals around hospitalizations over the next few weeks, while information about the prevalence of undetected cases could narrow prediction intervals around the timing and height of the peak of the epidemic. | |
www.medrxiv.org | |
2020 | |
Artículo | |
https://www.medrxiv.org/content/medrxiv/early/2020/04/08/2020.04.06.20052506.full.pdf | |
Inglés | |
VIRUS RESPIRATORIOS | |
Aparece en las colecciones: | Artículos científicos |
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