Development of a Supervised Learning Algorithm for Detection of Potential Disease Reemergence: A Proof of Concept.

Health Secur

Maneesha Chitanvis, MPH, and Forest Altherr, MPH, are Graduate Research Assistants; Nileena Velappan, MS, Attelia Hollander, Emily Alipio-Lyon, and Grace Vuyisich are Research Technologists; and Alina Deshpande, PhD, is Group Leader; all in Biosecurity and Public Health, Bioscience Division, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM.

Published: May 2020

Infectious disease reemergence is an important yet ambiguous concept that lacks a quantitative definition. Currently, reemergence is identified without specific criteria describing what constitutes a reemergent event. This practice affects reproducible assessments of high-consequence public health events and disease response prioritization. This in turn can lead to misallocation of resources. More important, early recognition of reemergence facilitates effective mitigation. We used a supervised machine learning approach to detect potential disease reemergence. We demonstrate the feasibility of applying a machine learning classifier to identify reemergence events in a systematic way for 4 different infectious diseases. The algorithm is applicable to temporal trends of disease incidence and includes disease-specific features to identify potential reemergence. Through this study, we offer a structured means of identifying potential reemergence using a data-driven approach.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/hs.2019.0020DOI Listing

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