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EPIcx updates

11/11/2020

 
Starting January 2020, EPIcx Lab is heavily involved on COVID-2019 pandemic assessment. For this reason, our website will be updated only on team and COVID-related information. Papers and reports of our studies are periodically published online on our website on the dedicated page ‘COVID-19’.  

 
New affiliation
 
Vittoria Colizza joined Tokyo Tech University (Tokyo, Japan) as Visiting Professor.
 
 
2 students and 2 post-docs joined our lab 

Chiara Sabbatini, after getting her MSc between Polytechnic of Turin and Sorbonne Université, enrolls the PhD School of Public Health to work on COVID-19 epidemic outbreak in Senegal. Elisabetta Colosi has just started her PhD program in Public Health after joining the lab in mid August. In the next three years, she will study the COVID-19 spread in school settings. Jonggul Lee, a former postdoctoral scholar at the National Institute for Mathematical Sciences in South Korea, joined EPIcx lab in September 2020 to work on mobility and COVID-19 spread. Giulia Bassignana is starting her first postdoctoral project at EPIcx lab after completing her PhD at the Paris Brain Institute.
 
 
New grants
​
  • ANR EVALCOVID-19 “Mathematical and computational modeling integrating real-time mobile phone data to evaluate interventions against COVID-19 pandemic in France” in collaboration with Orange S.A.
  • COVID-19-WA “Expected impact of social-distancing measures in West Africa”, Sorbonne Université, Faculté de Médecine. ​
  • H2020 RECOVER “Rapid European COVID-19 Emergency Response research”.
  • H2020 MOOD “MOnitoring Outbreak events for Disease surveillance in a data science context”.
  • Eugenio Valdano is the recipient of a MOPGA (Make Our Planet Great Again) Grant of the French Government, with a project titled “To predict the impact of climate changes on arboviral diseases in Senegal ”. 

Preparedness and vulnerability of African countries against introductions of 2019-nCoV

2/6/2020

 
The novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) epidemic has spread to 23 countries from China. Local cycles of transmission already occurred in 7 countries following case importation. No African country has reported cases yet. The management and control of 2019-nCoV introductions heavily relies on country’s health capacity. We evaluated the preparedness and vulnerability of African countries against their risk of importation of 2019-nCoV.
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​Global distribution of introduction risk over human population density (left) and distribution of the SPAR capacity index (top right) and Infectious Disease Vulnerability Index (IDVI, bottom right). Countries with no estimates of introduction risk correspond to situations where the risk of entry was found to be negligible at the time of analysis.

The report is currently under screening at medrxiv, we will update the links once it is posted.
​
​This work was done in collaboration with Marius Gilbert, Univ. Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium;
Moritz Kraemer, Univ. Oxford, UK; REACTing team, Inserm, Paris, France.

New paper published on risk importation of 2019-nCoV to Europe

1/31/2020

 
We published a new paper about the novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) early-stage importation risk to Europe.

Novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) early-stage importation risk to Europe, January 2020
G Pullano, F Pinotti, E Valdano, P-Y Boëlle, C Poletto, V Colizza, Euro Surveill. 2020;25(4):pii=2000057

As at 27 January 2020, 42 novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) cases were confirmed outside China. We estimated the risk of case importation to Europe from affected areas in China via air travel. We considered travel restrictions in place in Wuhan, three reported cases in France, one in Germany. Estimated risk in Europe remains high. The United Kingdom, Germany and France are at highest risk. Importation from Beijing and Shanghai would lead to higher and widespread risk for Europe.
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2019-nCoV importation risk to Europe

1/23/2020

 
Starting December 2019, cases of pneumonia of unknown etiology were reported in the city of Wuhan, in China. The infective pathogen was later identified to be a novel coronavirus, called 2019-nCoV. Here we report an analysis on the risk of importation estimated for Europe. 

​THE REPORT IS AVAILABLE HERE.
​
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Celebrating the first PhD defense in infectious disease surveillance

11/29/2019

 
On November 20, Caroline Guerrisi obtained her PhD with a thesis on surveillance and epidemiology of influenza-like-illness (you can find it here). The study was based on the participative online cohort GrippeNet.fr.
​
This is the first thesis on digital disease surveillance in our lab. Congratulations, Caroline!

​
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Hospital infections control

10/18/2019

 
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We have a new preprint on the study of healthcare-associated infections:

Reorganization of nurse scheduling reduces the risk of healthcare associated infections
E Valdano, C Poletto, PY Boelle, V Colizza

​We use time-referenced contact data measured by Sociopatterns sensors at a short-stay geriatric ward of a hospital in Lyon. After studying the activity pattern of nurses, we propose a proof-of-concept modeling study for hospital infection control based on the reorganization of care in a hospital ward through changes in the schedule of work shifts of nurses.



The reorganized schedule maintains full staff capacity at any given time, preserves all time-referenced contacts recorded in the dataset without affecting quality standards of medical services, and respects basic occupational constraints (weekly workload, length of a work shift).



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Reorganizing nurses' schedules reduce HAI risk by 27%, thus offering an alternative change of practice to substantially limit HAI risk in the ward while ensuring the timeliness and quality of healthcare services. In the study we identify a roadmap to include optimization of nurse scheduling practices in programs for better infection control in hospitals.

This study is done within the framework of the SPHINX project. 

Fall EPIcx updates

9/24/2019

 
We are entering into Fall with a whole bunch of news - Summer has been super busy with the sabbatical months of Prof. Shweta Bansal and her lab at EPIcx, the visit of collaborators from the University of La Havana (Cuba), and 5 Master students. 

In random order:

2 new papers. Over summer we published 2 new papers on the digital surveillance cohort Grippenet.fr. 
Man flu or woman flu? We analyzed 6 full influenza season with Grippenet.fr data to recover commonly known risk factors for an ILI episode and discover new ones. We found that women are at higher risk of contracting the infection, even after discounting for household composition and contacts with children. An addition to the interesting debate about man vs. woman flu, we'll look further into this problem integrating the database of GP surveillance. 
Factors associated with influenza-like-illness: a crowdsourced cohort study from 2012/13 to 2017/18
C Guerrisi, M Ecollan, C Souty, L Rossignol, C Turbelin, M Debin, T Goronflot, P-Y Boëlle, T Hanslik, V Colizza, T Blanchon
BMC Public Health 19, 879 (2019)

​From recommended to mandatory vaccination. On January 1st, 2018, France changed its policy for vaccinations against childhood diseases, changing 8 recommended vaccines into mandatory. We asked Grippenet.fr population about their opinion on this change of policy. 2/3 of the French population were in favor with the measure, though 60% found it to be authoritarian. A nice editorial on how vaccination policies are currently evolving in Europe accompanied the article. 
Population perception of mandatory childhood vaccination programme before its implementation, France, 2017
P Mathieu, A Gautier, J Raude, T Goronflot, T Launay, M Debin, C Guerrisi, C Turbelin, T Hanslik, C Jestin, V Colizza, T Blanchon, L Rossignol
Eurosurveillance 24(25):pii=1900053 (2019)


1 student ends, 1 student starts. Caroline Guerrisi will soon finish her PhD, with a defense planned for November 20 to discuss her work on digital surveillance in France. Here's her thesis. Laura Di Domenico, currently finishing her Master between the University of Trento, Dept of Mathematics, and INSERM, will enroll the PhD School of Public Health next November to work on the CDR4EBOLA project.  


4 new grants. We got 4 new grants selected over summer, these have been amazing months. More details here, new cycle at EPIcx soon to start, massive hiring ahead!


EPIcx freshens up. We took advantage of these months of great events to update and freshen up the lab website to reflect the evolution of the lab. You will see some changes.
  • The research direction on multistrain epidemics is becoming a full-body spin-off led by Chiara Poletto, deserving a novel digital space - follow Chiara for updates.
  • We added a novel line of research on the use of mobile phone data to assess the epidemic risk. This is something we've already been working on in the past (e.g. here and here) and that we're now pursuing in the context of developing countries. It is in collaboration with Orange, UCLA, INRIA, University of La Havana. 
  • A larger space will soon be dedicated to global animal health. It will cover a large-scale study on European livestock industry we are conducting in collaboration with 14 partners in Europe. We also collaborate on livestock industries in Brazil, Uruguay. 
  • Zoonoses will be the link between our work and the work of Raphaelle Metras who will join INSERM and our team in November, yay!


Networks2021. This is the very first Joint Sunbelt and NetSci Conference, hosted by IUNI in Washington, DC, in July 2021. Vittoria Colizza is member of the Steering Committee. It is going to be a unique and exciting event - the biggest network conference ever?!

4 grants funded

9/24/2019

 
Time to celebrate, summer 2019 has been particularly generous and we've been awarded 4 grants, yay! Here they are:
​

CDR4Ebola - Socio-behavioral response to 2014 West Africa Ebola virus epidemic measured from mobile phone data​

funded by INSERM, INRIA, in collaboration with Orange. 
​

​RISKFLOW - Uncovering HIV risk flow networks to improve current approaches for controlling HIV epidemics in sub-Saharan Africa

funded by Sorbonne Universite, Programme Emergence, in collaboration with UCLA.
​

​DATAREDUX - Big data reduction for predictive computational modelling

funded by ANR (French National Funding Agency for Research), in collaboration with CNRS, ENS-Lyon.
​

MOOD - Monitoring outbreak events for disease surveillance in a data science context

funded by EC - H2020 - this is a huge Consortium with 25 partners.
​
MASSIVE HIRING ahead!

New paper published on strain ecology and host contact network

6/4/2019

 
We published a new paper about the impact of host contact structure on the ecology of multiple strains

Host contact dynamics shapes richness and dominance of pathogen strains
F Pinotti, E Fleury, D Guillemot, P-Y Böelle, C Poletto, PLoS Computational Biology

We considered a population of individuals interacting  through a time varying network. New individuals and strains continuously enter and leave the system. We explored different scenarios in terms of host contact structure and characterised the resulting pathogen ecosystem through ecological indicators. We found that contact heterogeneities reduce strain richness, i.e. the number of co-circulating strains, favouring the dominance of few strains. Our results have far-reaching consequences for multi-strain pathogens such as Staphylococcus aureus, suggesting that contact structure is an important driver of strain diversity.

Our article has been featured on the top of the journal home! 
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Open PhD position at the University of Greenwich on Modelling behavioural changes induced by infectious disease via physical activity trackers

3/21/2019

 
This is an open PhD position at the University of Greenwich, UK, with Dr. Nicola Perra on modelling behavioural changes induced by infectious disease via physical activity trackers. The  aim is to characterise behavioural changes induced by seasonal influenza on mobility patterns and physiological indicators. The project is in collaboration with Dr. Vittoria Colizza (EPIcx lab) and  Dr. Luca Maria Aiello, Dr. Li Zhou, Dr Luis E Rocha.
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Deadline is Friday, April 12 2019. Full info here: 

https://www.findaphd.com/phds/project/modelling-behavioural-changes-induced-by-infectious-disease-via-physical-activity-trackers/?p107523

​Don't miss this amazing opportunity!
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