Do No Harm - Terminology, Assumptions, and Interpretation of Epidemic Models in Communities Most Affected

Do No Harm - Terminology, Assumptions, and Interpretation of Epidemic Models in Communities Most Affected

Fields Institute via YouTube Direct link

Introduction

1 of 32

1 of 32

Introduction

Class Central Classrooms beta

YouTube playlists curated by Class Central.

Classroom Contents

Do No Harm - Terminology, Assumptions, and Interpretation of Epidemic Models in Communities Most Affected

Automatically move to the next video in the Classroom when playback concludes

  1. 1 Introduction
  2. 2 Presentation
  3. 3 Heterogeneity
  4. 4 Sources of heterogeneity
  5. 5 Cities
  6. 6 Equity and social justice
  7. 7 Fundamental insights
  8. 8 Access to testing
  9. 9 Contact rates
  10. 10 Vaccine uptake
  11. 11 Public health messaging
  12. 12 Bivariate analysis
  13. 13 Framing individuals as vectors
  14. 14 No longer social inequalities
  15. 15 Stigma
  16. 16 Political correctness
  17. 17 Consequences
  18. 18 Principles of practice
  19. 19 The importance of amplifying
  20. 20 Ed Young
  21. 21 Dr John OBrien
  22. 22 Thank you
  23. 23 Comments
  24. 24 Simple but not too simple
  25. 25 Model specification
  26. 26 Mathematical modeling
  27. 27 Field Institute
  28. 28 Open Access
  29. 29 Lab Website
  30. 30 Mathematical background
  31. 31 Mathematical epidemiology
  32. 32 Conclusion

Never Stop Learning.

Get personalized course recommendations, track subjects and courses with reminders, and more.

Someone learning on their laptop while sitting on the floor.