Posted on 09/19/2014 8:46:26 AM PDT by scouter
Before starting, let me say that I do NOT believe the Ebola epidemic will get as bad as these projections indicate. I believe it will get pretty bad, especially for those in Africa, but not as bad as the current numbers say. I think there will be a number of factors that will significantly mitigate these numbers. How much? I don't know. But no one else does, either. I am not predicting the end of humanity. I'm simply showing where the current numbers lead, should nothing change. But of course, things will change. In any case, I do believe we need to take action now to prepare for the worst, hope for the best, and pray for the those affected.
The following information is presented for the reader's information and discussion. It it not a prediction of future events. As I mentioned when I originally posted my projections, my motivation is out of professional curiosity, the fact that my daughter will be on the front lines if Ebola does appear in the U.S., and because I think the numbers indicate that it is time to take prudent prepatory measures.
Another FReeper, DannyTN, has convinced me that version 1.0 of my model is too complicated, and that one relying more on the concepts of simple compound interest is likely to be more accurate. I've created the Scouter Ebola Projection Model Version 2.0. It has changed in the following ways:
1. Rather than calculating an exponent to apply to the number of cases on a given date, I now use a simple "compound interest" approach in which the Daily Transmission Rate (DTR) is determined using the Microsoft Excel Rate function, as follows:
DTR = RATE(NumDays, 0, NumStartCases, -NumEndCases)
where NumDays is the number of days from the start of the period being examined to the end of the period being examined, NumStartCases is the number of cases on the first day of the period, and NumEndCases is the number of cases on the last day of the period.
The DTR is then applied to the future, using the EndDate of the period selected as the first day of the "future", using the following formula:
ProjectedCases = StartingCases * (1 + DTR)^NumDays
where StartingCases is the number of cases on the End Date of the period being examined, DTR is the Daily Transmission Rate calculated above, and NumDays is the number of days from the End Date.
This allows me to examine how accurate it is by using past performance to project into the "future" and compare that to what actually happened. Using June's numbers, for example, projects that there will be 1,604 cases on August 1. In fact, there were 1,603. Pretty darn good. Using July's numbers projects that there will be 2,971 cases on September 1. There were 3,707. So it underestimated by 736 cases, or about 20% of the actual number. This is probably due to improved reporting. In other words, the number of reported cases in July was probably low.
2. The original model used the case report data as published on the Wikipedia article Ebola virus epidemic in West Africa. I have verified and changed the more recent values, and added additional values, based on my own research. The references for the data will be provided in the spreadsheet when I publish it.
3. I now calculate a separate Daily Transmission Rate for each date for which there is published data. It is calculated for the period of time between that date and the previous date for which there is data.
4. I've included some graphs, displayed below.
5. I now calculate the number of new cases and deaths on the last day of the period being projected.
Many readers have commented on several points that must be kept in mind when interpreting these numbers, and they need to be enumerated here.
1. Obviously the epidemic will not kill trillions of people. But if you project far enough into the future, that's what it will tell you. That's because I have not yet included anything to limit the number of cases. I'm working on that. But in the near case (out until 6 months or so), I don't see that as being a significant factor. But clearly, if the epidemic develops as these numbers suggest, there will come a point when the number of uninfected people in any given area will become significantly smaller, due to death and possible immunity, which will cause the rate of transmission to slow naturally.
2. Some credible epidemiologists and virologists are now saying that it may, in fact, be possible for Ebola to be transmitted through the air, without direct contact with the bodily fluids of an infected person. See COMMENTARY: Health workers need optimal respiratory protection for Ebola at the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy.
3. Besides the issues mentioned above, there are many, many factors that can and will affect the rate at which the epidemic is spreading. Some of these will increase the rate, and some will decrease the rate. We don't know how it is going to play out. This is why I'm trying to find a good way to incorporate the change in the Daily Transmission Rate (DTR) in future projections, and why I'm including graphs showing the change in the DTR over time, including trending lines.
4. There are various arguments for which time period to use for projecting into the future. One can argue that the longest interval for which we have data should be used because that smooths out the variability in the Daily Transmission Rate the most. Another argument is that a shorter interval is best because it doesn't matter how we got to the current numbers. Rather, what's important is how fast the epidemic is spreading now. For the numbers presented below, I've chosen a path between those two extremes. The period of time on which I based the DTR for the numbers below is August 1 through September 14.
5. Experts with front line knowledge of the current epidemic have testified before Congress that the reported numbers only represent 25% to 50% of the true size of the epidemic.
6. I do NOT account for variability in the accuracy or completeness of reporting, or for the possibility of bias in reporting. Garbage in, garbage out.
7. I do NOT include the cases of Ebola in a separate, unrelated outbreak in Congo.
I hope to publish the spreadsheet so you can make your own projections based on the parameters you are interested in. I've worked out how to sanitize it and host it. But I'll have to pretty it up first.
So here are the revised numbers, based on the most recent data and my revisions. It assumes that all actual cases have been reported. Graphs follow the numbers.
Scouter Ebola Projection Model Version 2.0 - Ebola Case Projections
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Projection Parameters
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Run Date/Time: 09/18/2014 at 23:02:18
Model: DTR Model
Start Date: 8/1/2014
End Date: 9/14/2014
Reported cases represent 100% of the true epidemic size
Rate of Increase per Day: 2.81%
*********************************************************
Weekly for the Next 8 Weeks
Date Cases Deaths Daily New Cases Daily New Deaths
========== ==================== ==================== ==================== ====================
09/14/2014 5,418 2,589 148 71
09/21/2014 6,576 3,143 180 86
09/28/2014 7,982 3,814 218 104
10/05/2014 9,689 4,630 264 126
10/12/2014 11,760 5,620 321 153
10/19/2014 14,274 6,821 390 186
10/26/2014 17,326 8,279 473 226
11/02/2014 21,030 10,049 574 274
End of Month for the Next 2 Years from the End Date
Date Cases Deaths Daily New Cases Daily New Deaths
========== ==================== ==================== ==================== ====================
09/30/2014 8,437 4,031 230 110
10/31/2014 19,898 9,508 543 260
11/30/2014 45,648 21,813 1,246 595
12/31/2014 107,662 51,446 2,939 1,404
01/31/2015 253,922 121,337 6,932 3,312
02/28/2015 551,157 263,371 15,046 7,190
03/31/2015 1,299,911 621,165 35,486 16,957
04/30/2015 2,982,161 1,425,030 81,410 38,902
05/31/2015 7,033,459 3,360,950 192,005 91,750
06/30/2015 16,135,646 7,710,444 440,485 210,486
Note: The negative "increase" in the above chart is due to reporting corrections made in the data by the reporting agencies. The straight lines indicate the trends in Daily Transmission Rate and Fatality Rate.
Bring Out Your Dead
Were gonna need
a bigger cart!
Post to me or FReep mail to be on/off the Bring Out Your Dead ping list.
The purpose of the Bring Out Your Dead ping list (formerly the Ebola ping list) is very early warning of emerging pandemics, as such it has a high false positive rate.
So far the false positive rate is 100%.
At some point we may well have a high mortality pandemic, and likely as not the Bring Out Your Dead threads will miss the beginning entirely.
*sigh* Such is life, and death...
I believe it will get pretty bad, especially for those in Africa
Pretty shocking numbers
My fear is that this is going to be much worse
than AIDS, I just don’t see “containment” as a
realistic tactic in this day and age.
If this stuff manages to reach modern society
we will find out how much of our society
is actually tribal, and for those that think
some how it will be different here, be prepared
for an awakening.
Read Defoe’s Journal of a Plague Year just for
starters. Yes I know this is not Plague but the
reactions of mankind will mostly be the same.
If this mutates, we may not have to worry about
over population as famine and disease will certainly
cut us back.
Isn't this the liberal fantasy?
you forget that one person coming from Liberia with unsymptomatic Ebola changes the US graph from 0 to 1 - at which point it could go exponential here too.
Kinda not like AIDS.
If this mutates, we may not have to worry about over population as famine and disease will certainly cut us back.
Isn’t this the liberal fantasy?
It is, as long as it’s someone else doing the dying.
A link to this thread has been posted on the Ebola Surveillance Thread
very true.
AIDS spread that far and killed this many this fast? Even without sexual contact?
And for similar reasons. It’s not just the luck of the draw that Africa is where this is, and where it is spreading, just as it is not the luck of the draw that the kids coming across the border have lice, but your kids don’t.
Even Sierra Leone knows that Quatantine works - that is why they are locking down the country for three days.
I cannot understand why there isn't an airline Quarantine until medical authorities can get a handle on this disease, and try to get ahead of it.
I understand the economic justification for continued commerce , but I think that given the swiftness of this disease, such a decision defies logic.
With no vaccine, the only known medical control is Quarantine
No, I'm not forgetting that. That's why I've calculated the numbers out. But just because the Daily Transmission Rate is currently 2.81% in Africa doesn't mean it will be the same here. It could be higher or lower. We just don't know how it will spread in a developed country. I can see arguments on both sides... that if it comes to NYC, for example, it could spread quite quickly. But on the other hand, it might stand a higher chance of being detected early on and successfully quarantined before the system gets overwhelmed. Who knows? It could go either way. That's why I'm saying we should prepare.
Remember, one huge advantage we have is that we're on the lookout for it so that we can contain it quickly. In Liberia and Sierra Leone, they were taken completely by surprise.
Reminds me of global warming models.
There are a couple of trip-line points:
1. The first indication of Ebola in more civilized parts of Africa (Egypt, South Africa, Morocco.)
2. The first indication of a case “in the wild” off the continent.
3. The first indication of a case “in the wild” in China, Russia, Europe.
4. The first indication of a case “in the wild” in the Western Hemisphere.
I think we will see #1 soon. #2-4 will fall in fast order.
I am not expecting a flash fire, but I think once the walls to “western” populations fall, the whole thing will fall fast.
I would also expect if we see break outs in China or Russia population centers, its game over. I think they would make a breakout happen here. And vice versa. Yes, I know how “tin foil hat” that sounds, but it makes economic and military sense.
Lice are everywhere, but not a problem in civilized countries.
I know it’s over-simplistic, but you get my drift.
And my personal belief is that if it gets TOO bad, it is the pale horseman, which would surprise me even less.
I think it’s so bad because of the culture it is growing in. It’s why I use the lice example.
The one glaring problem I see with your predictions is that you assume ebola will spread at the same rate in countries without proper sanitation and inadequate healthcare as it does in first world countries. Or do your numbers represent spread in Africa only?
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Or not.
Both possibilities are just as real. Remember, we have a different health care quality here, and we are the home of the proven cures. And we have a lot of this:
Which reminds me, I gotta call my stock broker. ;-)
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