Period of measurement in time-series predictions of disease counts from 2007 to 2017 in northern nevada: Analytics experiment

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Abstract

Background: The literature in statistics presents methods by which autocorrelation can identify the best period of measurement to improve the performance of a time-series prediction. The period of measurement plays an important role in improving the performance of disease-count predictions. However, from the operational perspective in public health surveillance, there is a limitation to the length of the measurement period that can offer meaningful and valuable predictions. Objective: This study aimed to establish a method that identifies the shortest period of measurement without significantly decreasing the prediction performance for time-series analysis of disease counts. Methods: The data used in this evaluation include disease counts from 2007 to 2017 in northern Nevada. The disease counts for chlamydia, salmonella, respiratory syncytial virus, gonorrhea, viral meningitis, and influenza A were predicted. Results: Our results showed that autocorrelation could not guarantee the best performance for prediction of disease counts. However, the proposed method with the change-point analysis suggests a period of measurement that is operationally acceptable and performance that is not significantly different from the best prediction. Conclusions: The use of change-point analysis with autocorrelation provides the best and most practical period of measurement.

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Talaei-Khoei, A., Wilson, J. M., & Kazemi, S. F. (2019). Period of measurement in time-series predictions of disease counts from 2007 to 2017 in northern nevada: Analytics experiment. JMIR Public Health and Surveillance, 5(1). https://doi.org/10.2196/11357

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