Organization:Institute for Disease Modeling

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Institute for Disease Modeling (IDM) is an institute within the Global Health Division of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Established in 2008 as part of the Global Good Fund, a non-profit subsidiary of Intellectual Ventures (IV) funded by Bill and Melinda Gates, IDM has transitioned in mid-2020 to the Gates Foundation.[1] IDM specializes in mathematical modelling of infectious disease and other quantitative global health research. Its models include malaria, polio, measles, COVID-19[2] and HIV (with EMOD). IDM releases source code of their stable models to the public.[3][4] While at IV, the institute was located in Bellevue, Washington. After the outbreak of COVID-19 in Washington (state) , IDM has transitioned to all-remote work with no physical offices. It will eventually relocate to the Gates Foundation's main office in Seattle.[citation needed]

Disease modeling software

EMOD is the group's individual-based disease modeling software (not a compartmental model) initially coded c. 2005. It has been released to the public as open-source software. The software can model malaria, HIV, tuberculosis, measles, dengue, polio and typhoid.[5]

In 2020, IDM developed a designated COVID-19 agent-based model named "Covasim." It was used initially to advise on decision-making during the COVID-19 pandemic in Oregon and in Washington State,[2][6] gaining national attention.[7][8] Covasim, coded in Python, is open-source and has been used by independent researchers around the world.[9]

References

  1. Cheney, Catherine (3 December 2020). "The Gates Foundation leans into disease modeling". Devex. https://www.devex.com/news/the-gates-foundation-leans-into-disease-modeling-98665. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 Sandi Doughton (March 15, 2020). "How big will the coronavirus outbreak get? This Bellevue scientist is figuring that out". The Seattle Times. https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/how-big-will-the-coronavirus-outbreak-get-this-bellevue-scientist-is-figuring-that-out/. 
  3. Eaton et al. 2015.
  4. Ross Reynolds (March 14, 2014). "Improving The Battle Against Infectious Diseases" (audio). Seattle: KUOW-FM. https://kuow.org/stories/improving-battle-against-infectious-diseases/. 
  5. Bershteyn et al. 2018.
  6. Tess Riski (March 31, 2020). "How Bad Will Oregon's Outbreak Get? It Depends on Which Experts You Ask.". Willamette Week. https://www.wweek.com/news/2020/03/31/how-bad-will-oregons-outbreak-get-it-depends-on-which-epidemiologists-you-ask/. "Two reliable studies show divergent COVID-19 outcomes in Oregon." 
  7. Todd Bishop; Taylor Soper (April 15, 2020), "As Washington state COVID cases keep falling, here's the data driving the ongoing 'stay home' order", Geekwire, https://www.geekwire.com/2020/washington-state-covid-19-cases-keep-falling-heres-data-driving-continued-stay-home-order/ 
  8. Gillian Friedman (April 3, 2020). "Coronavirus: How the West Coast is winning, and what Utah can learn". Deseret News (Salt Lake City). https://www.deseret.com/indepth/2020/4/3/21201898/coronavirus-utah-covid-19-flattening-curve-social-distancing-seattle-san-francisco. 
  9. Template:Cite medRxiv

Sources

External links

  • on GitHub
  • COVID-19 Chapter 11: Modeling, This Podcast Will Kill You, May 4, 2020, interview with Dr. Mike Famulare from the Institute for Disease Modeling recorded April 29, 2020 starts at 28:30