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Enhancement: Analytics that predict future spreading zone before outbreak occurs. #245
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I did a comparison in detail 👇 For detailed notes go to the Google sheet. It seems we tick a lot of the variables already. Maybe it's not too much work to add the other ones? One important factor, which I am not sure of now. Do we keep a time-series record of the data? E.g., do we track (or at least save in the DB) changes over time? |
I think it would be great to be able to predict the outbreak based on these questions. We have some data already so I’m not sure how much code needs to change and how the data will change as well compared to what we already collected in Norway. |
This would be extremely cool to check against the numbers we've collected in Norway! |
I will make the required changes to the form |
This is a great idea! What questions are asked on the form is critical to what kind of answers one can extract from the dataset. I think it would be worthwhile to contact the authors of the paper and see if we can get them interested. They in turn can reach out to their community. I tried to get these kinds of answers from Norwegian authorities, but no answers, and the recently published official form is quite lacking, I think -- but I'm not an epidemiologist, don't even play one on TV. The questionnaire in the paper is a great start and may even be all they need. Getting the codebase to the point where that questionnaire is supported is a very good thing, even though it means that already collected data may have to be thrown away or massaged. But for new countries or areas this doesn't matter. Another example of a form: http://test.koronaegenmelding.no:9000/survey/take/1. Google translate doesn't like the port number so copy+paste text to translate. |
I'll see if we can look up the authors online. |
It would be nice if someone could test the newly added fields on https://cac3bd65.ngrok.io/ The URL will work for a couple of hours. Translations are not completed yet. |
Quick feedback:
The additional field when selecting something that needs more information is a nice touch, but I actually missed it the first time. Would it be better to add it below so that I will catch it next? We tend to scroll top to bottom so if something shows up on my right I may not catch it depending on where my eyeballs are. On mobile it's not a problem of course. Good work -- big improvement! |
Thanks @kaared, fixed most of the points, but I waited with some of them: Can be tested with translations on https://cac3bd65.ngrok.io/ now. |
especially with edits, looks really good and understandable. Also works as expected. |
2: Indeed, let's not use gender: #202 |
I've reached out to the researchers of the paper to hear if we can be of any help to them. |
This research (see pdf + images below) does an analysis of questionnaires filled out by Israeli citizens where they argue they can predict "...future spreading zones a few days before an [COVID19] outbreak occurs."
As we plan to survey citizens and expect an enormous (hopefully) amount of data, this can be a very significant next step in helping authorities (and individuals) to take action BEFORE an exponential outbreak occurs in a specific township/county/zip-code area/region.
For NOW, I will at least compare which variables/symptoms we ask of people now vs what's in the research. Then we can more easily decide on the next steps (of going this route/enhancement or not).
Ideas on this?
PDF: A framework for identifying regional outbreak and spread of COVID-19 from one-minute population-wide surveys.
Survey form
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