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Are "cases", "waves", "tests" and "modeling" deceiving indicators to describe the COVID-19 pandemic?

Napodano, Catello M.Panu ; Cegolon, Luca ; Pichierri, Giuseppe ; Bellizzi, Saverio ; Sotgiu, Giovanni ; Lorettu, Liliana ; Farina, Gabriele and Maher, Osama Ali LU (2022) In Journal of Infection in Developing Countries 16(1). p.1-4
Abstract

This commentary elaborates on different methodological aspects complicating the interpretation of epidemiological data related to the current COVID-19 pandemic, thus preventing reliable within and across-country estimates. Firstly, an inaccuracy of epidemiological data maybe arguably be attributed to passive surveillance, a relatively long incubation period during which infected individuals can still shed high loads of virus into the surrounding environment and the very high proportion of cases not even developing signs and/or symptoms of COVID-19. The latter is also the major reason for the inappropriateness of the abused "wave"wording, which gives the idea that health system starts from scratch to respond between "peaks". Clinical... (More)

This commentary elaborates on different methodological aspects complicating the interpretation of epidemiological data related to the current COVID-19 pandemic, thus preventing reliable within and across-country estimates. Firstly, an inaccuracy of epidemiological data maybe arguably be attributed to passive surveillance, a relatively long incubation period during which infected individuals can still shed high loads of virus into the surrounding environment and the very high proportion of cases not even developing signs and/or symptoms of COVID-19. The latter is also the major reason for the inappropriateness of the abused "wave"wording, which gives the idea that health system starts from scratch to respond between "peaks". Clinical data for case-management on the other hand often requires complex technology in order to merge and clean data from health care facilities. Decision-making is often further derailed by the overuse of epidemiological modeling: Precise aspects related to transmissibility, clinical course of COVID-19 and effectiveness of the public health and social measures are heavily influenced by unbeknownst and unpredictable human behaviors and modelers try to overcome missing epidemiological information by relying on poorly precise or questionable assumptions. Therefore the COVID-9 pandemic may provide a valuable opportunity to rethink how we are dealing with the very basic principles of epidemiology as well as risk communication issues related to such an unprecedented emergency situation.

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author
; ; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
COVID-19, Epidemiology, Surveillance
in
Journal of Infection in Developing Countries
volume
16
issue
1
pages
4 pages
publisher
Journal of Infection in Developing Countries
external identifiers
  • pmid:35192514
  • scopus:85125156983
ISSN
2036-6590
DOI
10.3855/jidc.15456
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
e38e6f85-4929-44c1-bc49-8ef485dd23e9
date added to LUP
2022-04-26 15:55:19
date last changed
2024-05-30 11:36:52
@article{e38e6f85-4929-44c1-bc49-8ef485dd23e9,
  abstract     = {{<p>This commentary elaborates on different methodological aspects complicating the interpretation of epidemiological data related to the current COVID-19 pandemic, thus preventing reliable within and across-country estimates. Firstly, an inaccuracy of epidemiological data maybe arguably be attributed to passive surveillance, a relatively long incubation period during which infected individuals can still shed high loads of virus into the surrounding environment and the very high proportion of cases not even developing signs and/or symptoms of COVID-19. The latter is also the major reason for the inappropriateness of the abused "wave"wording, which gives the idea that health system starts from scratch to respond between "peaks". Clinical data for case-management on the other hand often requires complex technology in order to merge and clean data from health care facilities. Decision-making is often further derailed by the overuse of epidemiological modeling: Precise aspects related to transmissibility, clinical course of COVID-19 and effectiveness of the public health and social measures are heavily influenced by unbeknownst and unpredictable human behaviors and modelers try to overcome missing epidemiological information by relying on poorly precise or questionable assumptions. Therefore the COVID-9 pandemic may provide a valuable opportunity to rethink how we are dealing with the very basic principles of epidemiology as well as risk communication issues related to such an unprecedented emergency situation. </p>}},
  author       = {{Napodano, Catello M.Panu and Cegolon, Luca and Pichierri, Giuseppe and Bellizzi, Saverio and Sotgiu, Giovanni and Lorettu, Liliana and Farina, Gabriele and Maher, Osama Ali}},
  issn         = {{2036-6590}},
  keywords     = {{COVID-19; Epidemiology; Surveillance}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  pages        = {{1--4}},
  publisher    = {{Journal of Infection in Developing Countries}},
  series       = {{Journal of Infection in Developing Countries}},
  title        = {{Are "cases", "waves", "tests" and "modeling" deceiving indicators to describe the COVID-19 pandemic?}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.3855/jidc.15456}},
  doi          = {{10.3855/jidc.15456}},
  volume       = {{16}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}