Epidemiological modeling for infectious disease is important for disease management and its routine implementation needs to be facilitated through better description of models in an operational context. A standardized model characterization process that allows selection or making manual comparisons of available models and their results is currently lacking. A key need is a universal framework to facilitate model description and understanding of its features. Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) has developed a comprehensive framework that can be used to characterize an infectious disease model in an operational context. The framework was developed through a consensus among a panel of subject matter experts. In this paper, we describe the framework, its application to model characterization, and the development of the Biosurveillance Analytics Resource Directory (BARD; http://brd. bsvgateway.org/brd/), to facilitate the rapid selection of operational models for specific infectious/communicable diseases. We offer this framework and associated database to stakeholders of the infectious disease modeling field as a tool for standardizing model description and facilitating the use of epidemiological models.
CITATION STYLE
Margevicius, K. J., Generous, N., Abeyta, E., Althouse, B., Burkom, H., Castro, L., … Deshpande, A. (2016). The biosurveillance analytics resource directory (BARD): Facilitating the use of epidemiological models for infectious disease surveillance. PLoS ONE, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0146600
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