Litcius/Paper detail

Supporting COVID-19 policy-making with a predictive epidemiological multi-model warning system

Martin Bicher, Martin Zuba, Lukas Rainer, Florian Bachner, Claire Rippinger, Herwig Ostermann, Niki Popper, Stefan Thurner, Peter Klimek

2022Communications Medicine19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In response to the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, the Austrian governmental crisis unit commissioned a forecast consortium with regularly projections of case numbers and demand for hospital beds. The goal was to assess how likely Austrian ICUs would become overburdened with COVID-19 patients in the upcoming weeks. METHODS: We consolidated the output of three epidemiological models (ranging from agent-based micro simulation to parsimonious compartmental models) and published weekly short-term forecasts for the number of confirmed cases as well as estimates and upper bounds for the required hospital beds. RESULTS: We report on three key contributions by which our forecasting and reporting system has helped shaping Austria's policy to navigate the crisis, namely (i) when and where case numbers and bed occupancy are expected to peak during multiple waves, (ii) whether to ease or strengthen non-pharmaceutical intervention in response to changing incidences, and (iii) how to provide hospital managers guidance to plan health-care capacities. CONCLUSIONS: Complex mathematical epidemiological models play an important role in guiding governmental responses during pandemic crises, in particular when they are used as a monitoring system to detect epidemiological change points.

Topics & Concepts

Social distancePandemicEpidemiologyPsychological interventionHealth careCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Actuarial sciencePublic healthHealthcare systemBusinessWarning systemOperations researchMedical emergencyMedicineComputer scienceEconomicsEconomic growthNursingEngineeringInfectious disease (medical specialty)TelecommunicationsDiseasePathologyInternal medicineCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesData-Driven Disease SurveillanceCOVID-19 and healthcare impacts