Title: Biological Attack Model (BAM) Progress Report March 8
1Biological Attack Model(BAM)Progress
ReportMarch 8
- Sponsor Dr. Yifan Liu
- Richard Bornhorst
- Robert Grillo
- Deepak Janardhanan
- Shubh Krishna
- Kathryn Poole
2Agenda
- Project Plan
- Work Breakdown
- Biological Agent Parameters
- Assumptions Revisited
- Preliminary Model Overview
- Current Modeling Issues
3Project Plan
4Work Breakdown
- 320 of 875 man-hours completed.
- Ahead of schedule on modeling
- End modeling phase by next brief to give an extra
week to testing, evaluation, analysis, and
recommendations (4 weeks) - Develop early skeleton for final report
5Biological Agent Parameters
- Smallpox (ß 3) (d 30)
- Incubation Period 7-17 days
- Prodrome Period 2-4 days
- Symptomatic Period 20 days
- Ebola (ß 1-2) (d 40-90)
- Incubation Period 2-20 days
- Prodrome Period 2-4 days
- Symptomatic Period 6-9 days
- Viral Encephalitis (ß 3-4) (d 3-60)
- Incubation Period 5-15 days
- Prodrome Period 2-4 days
- Symptomatic Period 7-14 days
6Assumptions Revisited
- Attack Assumptions
- Single source where a certain number of people
are initially exposed - Diseases will be transmitted person to person
rather than airborne or food borne - Detected 24 hours after incident (may adjust for
future analysis) - Population Assumptions
- Constant population with no immigration/emigration
, births, or deaths that arent related to the
disease - People in the incubation stage (non-contagious)
are considered susceptible in terms of quarantine
and treatment since they are not yet known to be
infected
7Assumptions Revisited
- Quarantine Assumptions
- Various percentages of the population are
quarantined to analyze effectiveness - Isolation of confirmed and suspected cases with
vaccination and quarantine of contacts traced to
these cases - All other quarantine is voluntary confinement
- A percentage of the population cannot be
quarantined - Vaccination and Treatment Assumptions
- A percentage of population is already vaccinated
(when applicable) - Emergency response and medical staff already
vaccinated (if available) - Treatments are available for recovering those
that receive it - Vaccination and treatment have no significant
side effects - Those in quarantine without symptoms receive
available vaccination - Those showing symptoms do not receive vaccination
(treatment only)
8Two Phases
- First Phase
- The spread of the pathogen before detection
- Initial assumption is detection occurs after 24
hours, but this will be adjusted to analyze the
importance of early detection - Only three states during this phase Susceptible,
Infected, Infectious - Second Phase
- Occurs after outbreak has been identified
- The status of states at end of first phase
provide initial conditions for second phase - Containment strategies employed
9Preliminary Model Diagram
Track 10 different populations
SQi1Qi2QsI1I2RNRTRDD N
Recovered With Treatment RT
Quarantined Infected Qi1
Susceptible S
Infected I1
Quarantined Infectious Qi2
Dead D
Quarantined Susceptible QS
Infectious I2
Disabled RD
Recovered Without Treatment RN
10Preliminary Model Parameters
- Transmission Rate (b)
- Average Incubation Length (m1)
- Average Infectious Length (m2)
- Disease Mortality Rate (d)
- Quarantine Rate (q)
- Tracing Close Contacts of Infectious (a)
- Number of Treated Per Day (f)
- Treatment Efficacy Period (b)
- Disability Ratio (g)
- Total Population (N)
11Preliminary Model Parameters (Excel snapshot)
12Example Plot10,000 treated per day, 30
Quarantine Rate
13Example Plot10,000 treated per day, No
Quarantine
14Example Plot20,000 treated per day, 30
Quarantine Rate
15Current Modeling Issues
- Modeling a Coherent Detection Scheme
- Disease incubation periods vs. appearance of
symptoms - Arriving at a Balance between Number of States
Reality - Risk of Inaccuracy vs. simplification
- Recovery without treatment, Side effects.
- Integrity checks to be built in
- Containment as a combination of Reducing Contacts
and Treatment Resource Allocation - Effective Treatment allocation issue
- Availability of Emergency Responders
- Effect of varying ß due to Intervention efforts
- Diverse Containment strategies emerging for
different diseases - More data available on Smallpox than the others
- Translating results into Information for a
Decision Maker - Use of percentages of population vs. absolute
numbers
16Questions
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