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The need for methodological pluralism in epidemiological modelling.

Streicher, Pieter; Broadbent, Alex; Hellewell, Joel

The need for methodological pluralism in epidemiological modelling. Thumbnail


Authors

Pieter Streicher

Joel Hellewell



Abstract

During the Covid-19 pandemic, the best-performing modelling groups were not always the best-resourced. This paper seeks to understand and learn from notable predictions in two reports by the UK's Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (SAGE). In July 2021, SAGE reported that, after the upcoming lifting of restrictions ("Freedom Day") cases would "almost certainly remain extremely high for the rest of the summer" and that hospitalisations per day would peak between 100 and 10,000. Cases were not "extremely high" and began to decline, while hospitalisations initially lay outside (above) SAGE's confidence bounds, and only came within the expected range when the upper and lower bound moved so far apart as no longer to be useful for policy or planning purposes. The second episode occurred in December 2021, when SAGE projected 600-6000 deaths per day at peak in the scenario where restrictions remained as they were (referred to as "Plan B"). In the event, restrictions did not change, and deaths peaked at 202, well below the lower bound, even though this spanned one order of magnitude. We argue that the fundamental problem was over-reliance on mechanistic approaches to disease modelling, and that a methodologically pluralist approach would have helped. We consider various ways this could have been done, including evaluating past performance and considering data from elsewhere. We show how the South African Covid-19 Modelling Consortium performed better by learning from experience and using multiple methods. We conclude in favour of methodological pluralism in infectious disease modelling, echoing calls for methodological pluralism in recent literature on causal inference. [Abstract copyright: © 2024 The Authors.]

Citation

Streicher, P., Broadbent, A., & Hellewell, J. (2025). The need for methodological pluralism in epidemiological modelling. Global epidemiology, 9, Article 100177. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloepi.2024.100177

Journal Article Type Note
Acceptance Date Dec 9, 2024
Online Publication Date Dec 10, 2024
Publication Date 2025-06
Deposit Date Feb 5, 2025
Publicly Available Date Feb 5, 2025
Journal Global epidemiology
Electronic ISSN 2590-1133
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 9
Article Number 100177
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloepi.2024.100177
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/3362721

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