Authors
Paddy Ssentongo, Claudio Fronterre, Andrew Geronimo, Steven J Greybush, Pamela K Mbabazi, Joseph Muvawala, Sarah B Nahalamba, Philip O Omadi, Bernard T Opar, Shamim A Sinnar, Yan Wang, Andrew J Whalen, Leonhard Held, Christopher Jewell, Abraham JB Muwanguzi, Helen Greatrex, Michael M Norton, Peter J Diggle, Steven J Schiff
Publication date
2021/7/13
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
118
Issue
28
Pages
e2026664118
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic is heterogeneous throughout Africa and threatening millions of lives. Surveillance and short-term modeling forecasts are critical to provide timely information for decisions on control strategies. We created a strategy that helps predict the country-level case occurrences based on cases within or external to a country throughout the entire African continent, parameterized by socioeconomic and geoeconomic variations and the lagged effects of social policy and meteorological history. We observed the effect of the Human Development Index, containment policies, testing capacity, specific humidity, temperature, and landlocked status of countries on the local within-country and external between-country transmission. One-week forecasts of case numbers from the model were driven by the quality of the reported data. Seeking equitable behavioral and social …
Total citations
202020212022202320242516133
Scholar articles
P Ssentongo, C Fronterre, A Geronimo, SJ Greybush… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2021
P Ssentongo, C Fronterre, A Geronimo, SJ Greybush… - medRxiv, 2020