End of the COVID-19 Era: Models, Predictions and Projections
A special issue of Healthcare (ISSN 2227-9032). This special issue belongs to the section "Coronaviruses (CoV) and COVID-19 Pandemic".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 April 2024) | Viewed by 19812
Special Issue Editor
Interests: artificial intelligence; health care; human–computer interaction; machine learning; social networking (online); causality; medical computing; medical diagnostic computing; medical information systems
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Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
After two winters of COVID-19, in September 2022, an increase in cases has been recognized in data from the main countries in Western Europe, including the UK, Germany, France and Italy. With the number of cases already rising, the question in Europe, the US and the Western world is if this wave is likely to be better than the last wave or if these regions should prepare for another bad winter.
The situation in Africa or Asia is similar. For example, in recent days, Indonesia has recorded some of the highest numbers of COVID-19 cases in Southeast Asia, especially in young people aged 18 or younger. In Singapore, the reinfection rate is climbing due to a new Omicron sub-variant which is increasingly causing most of the daily new infections.
In general, worldwide, the waning immunity, increased vaccine hesitancy, decline in testing, masking fatigue and the return of children, students and workers to school, universities and jobs are all factors which, depending on the specific region, could increase infection rates, leading many citizens feeling like they are trapped in a never-ending loop.
The role played by new variants is also relevant. While Omicron has widely dominated in Europe and the US since the winter of 2021, also causing an unexpected summer wave due to its BA.5 sub-variant, new variants are growing fast, such as BA4.6, BF.7, BA.2.75.2 and BQ.1.1, for example.
At the moment, we have no clear indications of the effect that these sub-variants will have on the disease severity. For example, we still do not know whether the number of COVID-19-related deaths will remain relatively low, based on the consideration that the high population immunity achieved with vaccination and past infections will cause the fatality rate to continue to decline, stabilizing in a predictable, endemic state, or whether new deaths will occur due to a new infection wave. Obviously, we are not only concerned with deaths, because even a wave of medium intensity could have the potential to put massive additional pressure on health services, if coupled with other seasonal respiratory viruses.
For these reasons, we introduce this Special Issue, the purpose of which is to highlight problems and solutions related to the analysis of this multifaceted situation, predicting its outcomes and responding to the question posed in the title. Needless to say, we are looking for approaches based on scientific methods, that have the right balance between observation, logical reasoning and mathematical modelling. Attention will be primarily paid to papers employing an experimental design and making use of data and statistics, aiming to achieve the construction and use of models suitable for predictions and projections on the future developments of the COVID-19 pandemic and its impact on health services.
Prof. Dr. Marco Roccetti
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- COVID-19 pandemic: current and future state analysis
- models for analysis and predictions
- mathematical, computational, cognitive modelling for COVID-19
- COVID-19: data and surveillance
- epidemiology and infodemiology data for COVID-19
- computational epidemiology
- bioinformatics and immunoinformatics for COVID-19
- AI for COVID-19
- simulation for COVID-19
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