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Disease trajectories in the absence of the prospect of hospitalisation

Open bnlawrence opened this issue 4 years ago • 3 comments

The disease trajectory for any individual is currently set at infection. That trajectory includes the prospect of hospitalisation with or without an ICU visit and an endpoint of death or recovery.

In the event that hospitals are full, anyone whose trajectory would have included hospitalisation, but who cannot be hospitalised, is likely to die. This may be unlikely (full hospitals) in the UK in a second wave, but it could be likely in refugee camps etc.

An easy modifications to address this would be to check at the point where we would want to move them to hospital. If that is not possible, then whatever trajectory they would have been on (recovery or death) could be immediately set to result in a non-hospital, but long trajectory to recovery, or death at the next timestep, with a very high probability of the latter. More complex modifications may be possible at some other future time.

It might be argued that this would break the IFR stats, but I think the situation where we have full hospitals may not be one that was properly included in the IFR used. As I understand it we have used IFR probabilities and policies associated with the NHS approach to hospitalisation, in which case anyone we would have wanted to hospitalise would almost certainly have needed (at least) oxygen support at or near the point of admission. If it was not available, it would likely have resulted in death.

bnlawrence avatar Aug 07 '20 15:08 bnlawrence