This book has primarily been aimed at epidemiologists working with empirical data for both human and veterinary diseases. The final paragraph of this preface is probably the most important paragraph of the book, and if epidemiologists or healthcare or veterinary administrators are converted to the concept outlined in the last paragraph, then the book will have served a useful purpose: twenty-five years of epidemiological research culminated in the concept described in this paragraph. This book introduces second generation epidemiological modelling. Second generation modelling uses directly measurable biomodels that do not require estimates for their quantitative values. Biomodels encompass multiple model factors that would otherwise have to be estimated, and as such biomodels are directly correlated with disease prevalence and epidemic duration. This correlation enables biomodels to accurately predict the future course of an epidemic before it unfolds, whilst concurrently directing healthcare administrators where to target manpower and financial resources for optimal disease control. Whereas first generation modelling remains a useful tool for pedagogical or teaching purposes, second generation modelling [in the form of biomodels] allows healthcare administrators to cope with the demands of immediate and rapid disease control during periods of disease epidemics. Biomodels should be developed for important infectious diseases during periods of epidemiological ‘peacetime’, when manpower and resources are not held at a premium. Few non-fictional books are read cover-to-cover. To accommodate the selective reader, some of the most important concepts in this volume [such as biofactors, biomodels, subclinical disease and predictive accuracy] are repeated within relevant chapters. National and regional disease contingency planning should incorporate biomodels as useful tools when planning future disease control measures.
Marcus Hutber
Predicting and Controlling Disease [PDF ebook]
Predicting and Controlling Disease [PDF ebook]
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Formato PDF ● Páginas 187 ● ISBN 9781634630436 ● Editor Marcus Hutber ● Editora Nova Science Publishers ● Publicado 2015 ● Carregável 3 vezes ● Moeda EUR ● ID 7224971 ● Proteção contra cópia Adobe DRM
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