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Three Papers on PODS SNS Distribution, Vaccination Strategies, and POD Throughput

Three Papers on PODS SNS Distribution, Vaccination Strategies, and POD Throughput. Presented by Marty O’Neill II. The First Paper:. Resource Allocation for Demand Surge Mitigation during Disaster Response. Hina Arora, T.S. Raghu, & Ajay Vinze. Model population, regions, and stockpile.

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Three Papers on PODS SNS Distribution, Vaccination Strategies, and POD Throughput

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  1. Three Papers on PODSSNS Distribution, Vaccination Strategies, and POD Throughput Presented by Marty O’Neill II

  2. The First Paper: Resource Allocation for Demand Surge Mitigation during Disaster Response Hina Arora, T.S. Raghu, & Ajay Vinze

  3. Modelpopulation, regions, and stockpile There are T-1 regions and one SNS stockpile location. k is a node in the system where k=1 is the stockpile and k=2,3,…,T are the regions Pk is the population of region k, and P is the population across all regions. mk is the susceptible population of region k GARk is the gross attack rate of region k nk is the expected number of infected individuals, and nk = GARk * mk S courses of antivirals are available. Treatment requires 1 course. Prophylaxis requires 4 courses. Sk is the maximum stockpile allocation for region k using CDC’s equitable allocation approach Sk = (Pk / P) * S

  4. Modelprophylaxis & outcomes • For each region k, pPxskis the proportion of mk provided with prophylaxis treatment.This will consume a total of 4 * (pPxsk * mk) courses of antivirals from the stockpile. • Health outcomes w: • wd – death • wh – hospitalization • wo – outpatient care • wn – ill, but seek no medical care • Using The Economic Impact of Pandemic Influenza in the United States: Priorities for Intervention from EID by Meltzer, Cox, & Fukuda, • The number of expected health outcomes nw,kfor each region k is • nd,k = 0.00202 * nk • nh,k = 0.00791 * nk • no,k = 0.46276 * nk • nn,k = 0.52731 * nk

  5. Modelprophylaxis cost/benefit analysis ep,wis the expected effectiveness of prophylaxis averting a particular health outcome w vw is the value saved per person by averting a particular health outcome w Total savings: Total cost: Susceptibles are then reduced by mk * pPxsk * ep … which leads to a reduction in expected infections and expected health outcomes due to infection.

  6. Questions How much of the CDC stockpile should be pre-allocated? How does GAR impact cost and savings? How does implementation of transshipment impact savings? • Current policy is 100% • 60, 80, & 100% were examined • Lower vs. higher GAR examined • When stockpile has enough to go around, all thee cases perform equally well. • Lower vs. higher GAR examined • When stockpile has enough to go around, all thee cases perform equally well. • Transshippment vs. no transshipment

  7. Proportion of max savings vs. Proportion of Total Infectedlower GAR (above) and higher GAR (below) SNS SNS

  8. Comments • Paper studied Influenza PODs, but with focus on possibility of exponentially growing pandemic • How could their methodology of studying transshipping be applied to cost/benefit analysis of different mobile/temporary POD scenarios for Anthrax or Smallpox?

  9. The Second Paper: A Dynamic Network with Individual Mobility for Designing Vaccination Strategies Lia Mao & Ling Bian Focus is on Influenza vaccination

  10. Modeled Social Network (These are the same.) Day time Night time daytime Intercommunity travelersare assigned communitiescloser to each other usinga distance-decay function Note: This is in geographic space.

  11. Vaccination Methods Modeled • Travel-based – target intercommunity travelers • Contact-based – target individuals having larger numbers of direct contacts • Random – individuals are randomly selected for vaccination Vaccination is assumed to occur BEFORE outbreak begins.

  12. Different Networks Modeled(with N = 5000) * * Maximum Connected Component

  13. Vaccination Results% Infected Under-connected Network Over-connected Network

  14. Vaccination ResultsSpatial Patterns Under-connected Over-connected Travel-based Contact-based Random

  15. Conclusions from Paperand Final Notes • Travel-based strategy shows best results. • PODs can be established at transportation hubs. • Travel-based works best because of model assumptions. • Constraints in this model were on vaccination supplies, not time.

  16. Last (but not least)… The Third Paper: Modeling and Optimizing the Public-Health Infrastructure for Emergency Response Eva K. Lee, Chien-Hung Chen, Ferdinand Pietz, & Bernard Benecke Focus is on “mass dispensing of medical countermeasures for protection of the general population.”

  17. Within a POD • Assess client health status • Assess client eligibility to receive service • Assess implications of each case and refer for further investigation if necessary • Counsel clients regarding services and associated risks • Administer services • Educate clients regarding adverse events • Document services • … Example POD Flowchart

  18. POD Placement Methodology • Given the population, how many PODs are needed?All PODs shouldn’t have to be equal in number of booths. • Where should we place these PODs?

  19. Population Distribution/Location Methodology Census Population Data in Census Blocks Population Density of each block Overlay Grid(square mile) Calculate Population of Each Grid Cell Using Densities Problem:Assumes population’s spatial distribution is uniform within census blocks

  20. POD Location Model

  21. Overall Comments • Resource distribution, allocation, and reallocation are currently being studied for SNS distribution. • Results of computational models underscore importance of successful mitigation through treatment. • POD throughput analysis and optimization has been investigated. However, not enough attention has been paid to the geographic distribution of the population’s service requirements.

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