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Forecasting the COVID-19 Diffusion in Italy and the Related Occupancy of Intensive Care Units
Author(s) -
Livio Fenga
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of probability and statistics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1687-9538
pISSN - 1687-952X
DOI - 10.1155/2021/5982784
Subject(s) - occupancy , covid-19 , outbreak , intensive care , pandemic , intensive care unit , homogeneous , econometrics , magnitude (astronomy) , geography , diffusion , demography , statistics , demographic economics , business , operations research , economics , mathematics , medicine , biology , ecology , intensive care medicine , virology , infectious disease (medical specialty) , physics , disease , pathology , combinatorics , astronomy , sociology , thermodynamics
This paper provides a model-based method for the forecast of the total number of currently COVID-19 positive individuals and of the occupancy of the available intensive care units in Italy. The predictions obtained—for a time horizon of 10 days starting from March 29th—will be provided at a national as well as at a more disaggregated level, following a criterion based on the magnitude of the phenomenon. While those regions hit the most by the pandemic have been kept separated, those less affected regions have been aggregated into homogeneous macroareas. Results show that—within the forecast period considered (March 29th–April 7th)—all of the Italian regions will show a decreasing number of COVID-19 positive people. The same will be observed for the number of people who will need to be hospitalized in an intensive care unit. These estimates are valid under constancy of the government’s current containment policies. In this scenario, northern regions will remain the most affected ones, whereas no significant outbreaks are foreseen in the southern regions.

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