Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"mortality" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Two Chemical Engineers Look at the COVID-19 Pandemic De Visscher A; Pinheiro PatrĂ­cio PC; 35942051
ENCS
2 Potential Movement Corridors and High Road-Kill Likelihood do not Spatially Coincide for Felids in Brazil: Implications for Road Mitigation. Cerqueira RC, Leonard PB, da Silva LG, Bager A, Clevenger AP, Jaeger JAG, Grilo C 33469694
BIOLOGY
3 The COVID-19 pandemic: model-based evaluation of non-pharmaceutical interventions and prognoses. De Visscher A 32836820
ENCS
4 An adaptive plan for prioritizing road sections for fencing to reduce animal mortality. Spanowicz AG, Teixeira FZ, Jaeger JAG 32227646
GEOGRAPHY
5 Population variation in density-dependent growth, mortality and their trade-off in a stream fish. Matte JM, Fraser DJ, Grant JWA 31642512
BIOLOGY
6 How do landscape context and fences influence roadkill locations of small and medium-sized mammals? Plante J, Jaeger JAG, Desrochers A 30711836
GEOGRAPHY

 

Title:The COVID-19 pandemic: model-based evaluation of non-pharmaceutical interventions and prognoses.
Authors:De Visscher A
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32836820
DOI:10.1007/s11071-020-05861-7
Publication:Nonlinear dynamics
Keywords:Case mortality rateDoubling timeHerd immunityR0SARS-CoV-2Social distancing
PMID:32836820 Category:Nonlinear Dyn Date Added:2020-08-25
Dept Affiliation: ENCS
1 Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering, Gina Cody School of Engineering and Computer Science, Concordia University, Montreal, QC Canada.

Description:

The COVID-19 pandemic: model-based evaluation of non-pharmaceutical interventions and prognoses.

Nonlinear Dyn. 2020 Aug 10; :1-17

Authors: De Visscher A

Abstract

An epidemiological model for COVID-19 was developed and implemented in MATLAB/GNU Octave for use by public health practitioners, policy makers, and the general public. The model distinguishes four stages in the disease: infected, sick, seriously sick, and better. The model was preliminarily parameterized based on observations of the spread of the disease. The model assumes a case mortality rate of 1.5%. Preliminary simulations with the model indicate that concepts such as "herd immunity" and containment ("flattening the curve") are highly misleading in the context of this virus. Public policies based on these concepts are inadequate to protect the population. Only reducing the R 0 of the virus below 1 is an effective strategy for maintaining the death burden of COVID-19 within the normal range of seasonal flu. The model is illustrated with the cases of Italy, France, and Iran and is able to describe the number of deaths as a function of time in all these cases although future projections tend to slightly overestimate the number of deaths when the analysis is made early on. The model can also be used to describe reopenings of the economy after a lockdown. The case mortality rate is still prone to large uncertainty, but modeling combined with an investigation of blood donations in The Netherlands imposes a lower limit of 1%.

PMID: 32836820 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]





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