During the COVID-19 pandemic, both the promise and perils of using infectious disease transmission models to make public health policy decisions became clearer than ever. Optimal use of modeled output requires that public health policy makers be informed consumers of models, that they understand the strengths and limitations of possible approaches, and they know the right questions to ask about the vulnerabilities of the model results.

Infectious Disease Transmission Models for Decision-Makers

Infectious Disease Transmission Models for Decision-Makers


Instructors: Emily Gurley, PhD, MPH
Access provided by Xavier School of Management, XLRI
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What you'll learn
Review the basics of infections disease epidemiology and transmission and key components of infectious disease models
Present questions that can be answered by infectious disease transmission models and types of models used to answer each type of question
Describe how to assess whether or not a model is “good” or useful for informing policy
Identify the most important considerations for making decisions based on infectious disease transmission models
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Reviewed on Aug 29, 2022
As a contact tracer I really enjoyed learning about this subject matter and in particular how public health policy is shaped
Reviewed on Jan 6, 2023
what a tremendous course most of knowledge we have learned from this. We request to all my dear colleagues to take this course for knowledge gaining about infection
Reviewed on Aug 22, 2023
This the best course for me as per required my job-related. I learned much. And need Data Analysis, Data Collection, and organizing data.With thanks & regards

