Malaria Modeling in the Era of Eradication
Author(s) -
Thomas Smith,
Nakul Chitnis,
Melissa A. Penny,
Marcel Tanner
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
cold spring harbor perspectives in medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.853
H-Index - 105
eISSN - 2472-5412
pISSN - 2157-1422
DOI - 10.1101/cshperspect.a025460
Subject(s) - malaria , software deployment , computer science , psychological intervention , management science , risk analysis (engineering) , the internet , data science , hubris , intervention (counseling) , engineering ethics , process management , medicine , business , engineering , immunology , psychiatry , world wide web , operating system , history , classics
Mathematical models provide the essential basis of rational research and development strategies in malaria, informing the choice of which technologies to target, which deployment strategies to consider, and which populations to focus on. The Internet and remote sensing technologies also enable assembly of ever more relevant field data. Together with supercomputing technology, this has made available timely descriptions of the geography of malaria transmission and disease across the world and made it possible for policy and planning to be informed by detailed simulations of the potential impact of intervention programs. These information technology advances do not replace the basic understanding of the dynamics of malaria transmission that should be embedded in the thinking of anyone planning malaria interventions. The appropriate use of modeling may determine whether we are living in an era of hubris or indeed in an age of eradication.
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