
In addition, a poster reporting on the results of the representativeness of GrippeNet.fr in France was presented by Marion Debin.
![]() Vittoria Colizza presented at the EPIWORK Digital Epidemiology workshop the results of the study on the representativeness of the Influenzanet cohort (on the left, the geographic repartition of Influenzanet participants with respect to the general population). The study was carried uot in collaboration with Pietro Cantarelli during his winter semester visit at the U707. In addition, a poster reporting on the results of the representativeness of GrippeNet.fr in France was presented by Marion Debin. Ashleigh Van Metre, a student from Wofford College, South Carolina, USA, joins the lab for a summer internship on computational epidemiology.
![]() The Epicx-lab contributed with three invited talks to the 4th Workshop on Simulation Models of Infectious Disease Transmission and Control Processes (SIMID) that took place in Antwerp, Belgium, from April 17 to 18, 2013. The two day workshop was organized as a joint effort by the Universiy of Antwerp and the University of Hasselt and covered topics such as immunology, social contact data, seasonal influenza modelling, transmission models for bacteria and its relation to resistance, ethics of vaccination policy and the economic evaluation of vaccination programs. A whole session of workshop was devoted to metapopulation models and their application in epidemic modeling and it featured three invited talks by three members of the Epicx team. Michele Tizzoni presented a talk titled Real-time numerical forecasts of global epidemic spreading: case study of 2009 A/H1N1 pdm descrbing the results obtained by the GLEAM model during the 2009 H1N1 pandemic and recently published in BMC Medicine. in her talk titled Host mobility drives pathogen competition in spatially structured populations, Chiara Poletto described some recent results on the interaction between the biologic characteristics of influenza virus strains and the host mobility. The talk Age-specific contacts and travel patterns in the spatial spread of the 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic by Vittoria Colizza focused on the role of age-structure to explain the differences in the impact of the 2009 pandemic in different countries. As described by the paper recenlty published in BMC Infectious Diseases, the age-related differences in contact and travel behavior could explain why some countries where affected earlier than others during the pandemic outbreak. |
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