Mathematical modelling to inform outbreak response vaccination
Manjari Shankar (1), Anna-Maria Hartner (1, 2), Callum R. K. Arnold, (3), Ezra Gayawan (4), Hyolim Kang (5), Jong-Hoon Kim (6), Gemma Nedjati, Gilani (1), Anne Cori (1), Han Fu (5), Mark Jit (5, 11), Rudzani Muloiwa, (7), Allison Portnoy (8, 9), Caroline Trotter (1, 10)

TL;DR
Mathematical models are crucial tools for guiding outbreak response vaccination strategies, helping optimize timing, prioritization, and resource allocation to reduce disease impact.
Contribution
This review synthesizes how models inform vaccine response for 10 VPDs and discusses challenges like data gaps and stakeholder communication.
Findings
Models help prioritize vaccine distribution during outbreaks.
Timely vaccination significantly reduces morbidity and mortality.
Data quality critically influences model effectiveness.
Abstract
Mathematical models are established tools to assist in outbreak response. They help characterise complex patterns in disease spread, simulate control options to assist public health authorities in decision-making, and longer-term operational and financial planning. In the context of vaccine-preventable diseases (VPDs), vaccines are one of the most-cost effective outbreak response interventions, with the potential to avert significant morbidity and mortality through timely delivery. Models can contribute to the design of vaccine response by investigating the importance of timeliness, identifying high-risk areas, prioritising the use of limited vaccine supply, highlighting surveillance gaps and reporting, and determining the short- and long-term benefits. In this review, we examine how models have been used to inform vaccine response for 10 VPDs, and provide additional insights into the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 epidemiological studies
