Multivariate outbreak detection
Abstract
On-line monitoring is needed to detect outbreaks of diseases like influenza. Surveillance is also needed for other kinds of outbreaks, in the sense of an increasing expected value after a constant period. Information on spatial location or other variables might be available and may be utilized. We adapted a robust method for outbreak detection to a multivariate case. The relation between the times of the onsets of the outbreaks at different locations (or some other variable) was used to determine the sufficient statistic for surveillance. The derived maximum likelihood estimator of the outbreak regression was semi-parametric in the sense that the baseline and the slope were non-parametric while the distribution belonged to the exponential family. The estimator was used in a generalized likelihood ratio surveillance method. The method was evaluated with respect to robustness and efficiency in a simulation study and applied to spatial data for detection of influenza outbreaks in Sweden.
Publisher
University of Gothenburg
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2010Author
Schiöler, Linus
Frisén, Marianne
Keywords
Exponential family
Generalised likelihood
Ordered regression
Regional data
Surveillance
Publication type
report
ISSN
0349-8034
Series/Report no.
Research Report
2010:2
Language
eng