Guido Camargo España

Guido Camargo España

University of Notre Dame

H-index: 18

North America-United States

About Guido Camargo España

Guido Camargo España, With an exceptional h-index of 18 and a recent h-index of 17 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at University of Notre Dame, specializes in the field of Infectious disease modeling, Optimization, Control theory, Vector-borne diseases.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Potential impact of annual vaccination with reformulated COVID-19 vaccines: lessons from the US COVID-19 Scenario Modeling Hub

Projecting the future impact of emerging SARS-CoV-2 variants under uncertainty: modeling the initial Omicron outbreak

Correction: Pandemic-associated mobility restrictions could cause increases in dengue virus transmission

Informing pandemic response in the face of uncertainty. An evaluation of the US COVID-19 Scenario Modeling Hub

Pandemic-associated mobility restrictions could cause increases in dengue virus transmission (vol 17, e0011032, 2023)

Economic analysis and health impacts of routine vaccination with TAK-003 dengue vaccine in San Juan, Puerto Rico

Impact of SARS-CoV-2 vaccination of children ages 5–11 years on COVID-19 disease burden and resilience to new variants in the United States, November 2021–March 2022: A multi …

Community incidence patterns drive the risk of SARS-CoV-2 outbreaks and alter intervention impacts in a high-risk institutional setting

Guido Camargo España Information

University

University of Notre Dame

Position

___

Citations(all)

1340

Citations(since 2020)

1196

Cited By

411

hIndex(all)

18

hIndex(since 2020)

17

i10Index(all)

24

i10Index(since 2020)

22

Email

University Profile Page

University of Notre Dame

Guido Camargo España Skills & Research Interests

Infectious disease modeling

Optimization

Control theory

Vector-borne diseases

Top articles of Guido Camargo España

Potential impact of annual vaccination with reformulated COVID-19 vaccines: lessons from the US COVID-19 Scenario Modeling Hub

Authors

Sung-mok Jung,Sara L Loo,Emily Howerton,Lucie Contamin,Claire P Smith,Erica C Carcelén,Katie Yan,Samantha J Bents,John Levander,Jessi Espino,Joseph C Lemaitre,Koji Sato,Clifton D McKee,Alison L Hill,Matteo Chinazzi,Jessica T Davis,Kunpeng Mu,Alessandro Vespignani,Erik T Rosenstrom,Sebastian A Rodriguez-Cartes,Julie S Ivy,Maria E Mayorga,Julie L Swann,Guido España,Sean Cavany,Sean M Moore,T Alex Perkins,Shi Chen,Rajib Paul,Daniel Janies,Jean-Claude Thill,Ajitesh Srivastava,Majd Al Aawar,Kaiming Bi,Shraddha Ramdas Bandekar,Anass Bouchnita,Spencer J Fox,Lauren Ancel Meyers,Przemyslaw Porebski,Srini Venkatramanan,Aniruddha Adiga,Benjamin Hurt,Brian Klahn,Joseph Outten,Jiangzhuo Chen,Henning Mortveit,Amanda Wilson,Stefan Hoops,Parantapa Bhattacharya,Dustin Machi,Anil Vullikanti,Bryan Lewis,Madhav Marathe,Harry Hochheiser,Michael C Runge,Katriona Shea,Shaun Truelove,Cécile Viboud,Justin Lessler

Journal

PLoS medicine

Published Date

2024/4/17

Background Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) continues to cause significant hospitalizations and deaths in the United States. Its continued burden and the impact of annually reformulated vaccines remain unclear. Here, we present projections of COVID-19 hospitalizations and deaths in the United States for the next 2 years under 2 plausible assumptions about immune escape (20% per year and 50% per year) and 3 possible CDC recommendations for the use of annually reformulated vaccines (no recommendation, vaccination for those aged 65 years and over, vaccination for all eligible age groups based on FDA approval). Methods and findings The COVID-19 Scenario Modeling Hub solicited projections of COVID-19 hospitalization and deaths between April 15, 2023 and April 15, 2025 under 6 scenarios representing the intersection of considered levels of immune escape and vaccination. Annually reformulated vaccines are assumed to be 65% effective against symptomatic infection with strains circulating on June 15 of each year and to become available on September 1. Age- and state-specific coverage in recommended groups was assumed to match that seen for the first (fall 2021) COVID-19 booster. State and national projections from 8 modeling teams were ensembled to produce projections for each scenario and expected reductions in disease outcomes due to vaccination over the projection period. From April 15, 2023 to April 15, 2025, COVID-19 is projected to cause annual epidemics peaking November to January. In the most pessimistic scenario (high immune escape, no vaccination recommendation), we project 2.1 million …

Projecting the future impact of emerging SARS-CoV-2 variants under uncertainty: modeling the initial Omicron outbreak

Authors

Sean Moore,Sean Cavany,T Alex Perkins,Guido Felipe Camargo Espana

Journal

Epidemics

Published Date

2024/3/2

Over the past several years, the emergence of novel SARS-CoV-2 variants has led to multiple waves of increased COVID-19 incidence. When the Omicron variant emerged, there was considerable concern about its potential impact in the winter of 2021–2022 due to its increased fitness. However, there was also considerable uncertainty regarding its likely impact due to questions about its relative transmissibility, severity, and degree of immune escape. We sought to evaluate the ability of an agent-based model to forecast incidence in the context of this emerging pathogen variant. To project COVID-19 cases and deaths in Indiana, we calibrated our model to COVID-19 hospitalizations, deaths, and test-positivity rates through November 2021, and then projected COVID-19 incidence through April 2022 under four different scenarios that covered the plausible ranges of Omicron’s severity, transmissibility, and degree of …

Correction: Pandemic-associated mobility restrictions could cause increases in dengue virus transmission

Authors

Sean M Cavany,Guido España,Gonzalo M Vazquez-Prokopec,Thomas W Scott,T Alex Perkins

Journal

PLoS neglected tropical diseases

Published Date

2023/1/4

There is an error in Fig 3. The values on the color bar for picture C. Population density/km 2 are in correct. Instead of ranging from 0 to 1000, they should range from 5000 to 25000. Please see the correct Fig 3 here.

Informing pandemic response in the face of uncertainty. An evaluation of the US COVID-19 Scenario Modeling Hub

Authors

Emily Howerton,Lucie Contamin,Luke C Mullany,Michelle Qin,Nicholas G Reich,Samantha Bents,Rebecca K Borchering,Sung-mok Jung,Sara L Loo,Claire P Smith,John Levander,Jessica Kerr,J Espino,Willem G van Panhuis,Harry Hochheiser,Marta Galanti,Teresa Yamana,Sen Pei,Jeffrey Shaman,Kaitlin Rainwater-Lovett,Matt Kinsey,Kate Tallaksen,Shelby Wilson,Lauren Shin,Joseph C Lemaitre,Joshua Kaminsky,Juan Dent Hulse,Elizabeth C Lee,Clif McKee,Alison Hill,Dean Karlen,Matteo Chinazzi,Jessica T Davis,Kunpeng Mu,Xinyue Xiong,Ana Pastore y Piontti,Alessandro Vespignani,Erik T Rosenstrom,Julie S Ivy,Maria E Mayorga,Julie L Swann,Guido España,Sean Cavany,Sean Moore,Alex Perkins,Thomas Hladish,Alexander Pillai,Kok Ben Toh,Ira Longini Jr,Shi Chen,Rajib Paul,Daniel Janies,Jean-Claude Thill,Anass Bouchnita,Kaiming Bi,Michael Lachmann,Spencer Fox,Lauren Ancel Meyers,Ajitesh Srivastava,Przemyslaw Porebski,Srini Venkatramanan,Aniruddha Adiga,Bryan Lewis,Brian Klahn,Joseph Outten,Benjamin Hurt,Jiangzhuo Chen,Henning Mortveit,Amanda Wilson,Madhav Marathe,Stefan Hoops,Parantapa Bhattacharya,Dustin Machi,Betsy L Cadwell,Jessica M Healy,Rachel B Slayton,Michael A Johansson,Matthew Biggerstaff,Shaun Truelove,Michael C Runge,Katriona Shea,Cécile Viboud,Justin Lessler,UT COVID-19 Modeling Consortium

Journal

medRxiv

Published Date

2023/7/3

Our ability to forecast epidemics more than a few weeks into the future is constrained by the complexity of disease systems, our limited ability to measure the current state of an epidemic, and uncertainties in how human action will affect transmission. Realistic longer-term projections (spanning more than a few weeks) may, however, be possible under defined scenarios that specify the future state of critical epidemic drivers, with the additional benefit that such scenarios can be used to anticipate the comparative effect of control measures. Since December 2020, the US COVID-19 Scenario Modeling Hub (SMH) has convened multiple modeling teams to make 6-month ahead projections of the number of SARS-CoV-2 cases, hospitalizations and deaths. The SMH released nearly 1.8 million national and state-level projections between February 2021 and November 2022. SMH performance varied widely as a function of …

Pandemic-associated mobility restrictions could cause increases in dengue virus transmission (vol 17, e0011032, 2023)

Authors

Sean M Cavany,Guido España,Gonzalo M Vazquez-Prokopec,Thomas W Scott,T Alex Perkins

Journal

PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases

Published Date

2021/8/9

Background The COVID-19 pandemic has induced unprecedented reductions in human mobility and social contacts throughout the world. Because dengue virus (DENV) transmission is strongly driven by human mobility, behavioral changes associated with the pandemic have been hypothesized to impact dengue incidence. By discouraging human contact, COVID-19 control measures have also disrupted dengue vector control interventions, the most effective of which require entry into homes. We sought to investigate how and why dengue incidence could differ under a lockdown scenario with a proportion of the population sheltered at home. Methodology & principal findings We used an agent-based model with a realistic treatment of human mobility and vector control. We found that a lockdown in which 70% of the population sheltered at home and which occurred in a season when a new serotype invaded could lead to a small average increase in cumulative DENV infections of up to 10%, depending on the time of year lockdown occurred. Lockdown had a more pronounced effect on the spatial distribution of DENV infections, with higher incidence under lockdown in regions with higher mosquito abundance. Transmission was also more focused in homes following lockdown. The proportion of people infected in their own home rose from 54% under normal conditions to 66% under lockdown, and the household secondary attack rate rose from 0.109 to 0.128, a 17% increase. When we considered that lockdown measures could disrupt regular, city-wide vector control campaigns, the increase in incidence was more pronounced than with …

Economic analysis and health impacts of routine vaccination with TAK-003 dengue vaccine in San Juan, Puerto Rico

Authors

Guido España,Manar Alkuzweny,Alex Perkins

Published Date

2023/6/22

• AP currently receives research funding and consulting fees from Emergent Biosciences to support unrelated research on chikungunya vaccine development.• As of June 2023, GE is an employee of CDC. This work was performed while working at the University of Notre Dame. The findings and conclusions in this presentation are those of the author (s) and do not necessarily represent the views of the CDC.

Impact of SARS-CoV-2 vaccination of children ages 5–11 years on COVID-19 disease burden and resilience to new variants in the United States, November 2021–March 2022: A multi …

Authors

Rebecca K Borchering,Luke C Mullany,Emily Howerton,Matteo Chinazzi,Claire P Smith,Michelle Qin,Nicholas G Reich,Lucie Contamin,John Levander,Jessica Kerr,J Espino,Harry Hochheiser,Kaitlin Lovett,Matt Kinsey,Kate Tallaksen,Shelby Wilson,Lauren Shin,Joseph C Lemaitre,Juan Dent Hulse,Joshua Kaminsky,Elizabeth C Lee,Alison L Hill,Jessica T Davis,Kunpeng Mu,Xinyue Xiong,Ana Pastore y Piontti,Alessandro Vespignani,Ajitesh Srivastava,Przemyslaw Porebski,Srini Venkatramanan,Aniruddha Adiga,Bryan Lewis,Brian Klahn,Joseph Outten,Benjamin Hurt,Jiangzhuo Chen,Henning Mortveit,Amanda Wilson,Madhav Marathe,Stefan Hoops,Parantapa Bhattacharya,Dustin Machi,Shi Chen,Rajib Paul,Daniel Janies,Jean-Claude Thill,Marta Galanti,Teresa Yamana,Sen Pei,Jeffrey Shaman,Guido España,Sean Cavany,Sean Moore,Alex Perkins,Jessica M Healy,Rachel B Slayton,Michael A Johansson,Matthew Biggerstaff,Katriona Shea,Shaun A Truelove,Michael C Runge,Cécile Viboud,Justin Lessler

Journal

The Lancet Regional Health–Americas

Published Date

2023/1/1

BackgroundThe COVID-19 Scenario Modeling Hub convened nine modeling teams to project the impact of expanding SARS-CoV-2 vaccination to children aged 5–11 years on COVID-19 burden and resilience against variant strains.MethodsTeams contributed state- and national-level weekly projections of cases, hospitalizations, and deaths in the United States from September 12, 2021 to March 12, 2022. Four scenarios covered all combinations of 1) vaccination (or not) of children aged 5–11 years (starting November 1, 2021), and 2) emergence (or not) of a variant more transmissible than the Delta variant (emerging November 15, 2021). Individual team projections were linearly pooled. The effect of childhood vaccination on overall and age-specific outcomes was estimated using meta-analyses.FindingsAssuming that a new variant would not emerge, all-age COVID-19 outcomes were projected to decrease …

Community incidence patterns drive the risk of SARS-CoV-2 outbreaks and alter intervention impacts in a high-risk institutional setting

Authors

Sean M Moore,Guido España,T Alex Perkins,Robert M Guido,Joaquin B Jucaban,Tara L Hall,Mark E Huhtanen,Sheila A Peel,Kayvon Modjarrad,Shilpa Hakre,Paul T Scott

Journal

Epidemics

Published Date

2023/6/1

Optimization of control measures for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) in high-risk institutional settings (e.g., prisons, nursing homes, or military bases) depends on how transmission dynamics in the broader community influence outbreak risk locally. We calibrated an individual-based transmission model of a military training camp to the number of RT-PCR positive trainees throughout 2020 and 2021. The predicted number of infected new arrivals closely followed adjusted national incidence and increased early outbreak risk after accounting for vaccination coverage, masking compliance, and virus variants. Outbreak size was strongly correlated with the predicted number of off-base infections among staff during training camp. In addition, off-base infections reduced the impact of arrival screening and masking, while the number of infectious trainees upon arrival reduced the impact of …

Evaluation of the US COVID-19 Scenario Modeling Hub for informing pandemic response under uncertainty

Authors

Emily Howerton,Lucie Contamin,Luke C Mullany,Michelle Qin,Nicholas G Reich,Samantha Bents,Rebecca K Borchering,Sung-mok Jung,Sara L Loo,Claire P Smith,John Levander,Jessica Kerr,J Espino,Willem G van Panhuis,Harry Hochheiser,Marta Galanti,Teresa Yamana,Sen Pei,Jeffrey Shaman,Kaitlin Rainwater-Lovett,Matt Kinsey,Kate Tallaksen,Shelby Wilson,Lauren Shin,Joseph C Lemaitre,Joshua Kaminsky,Juan Dent Hulse,Elizabeth C Lee,Clifton D McKee,Alison Hill,Dean Karlen,Matteo Chinazzi,Jessica T Davis,Kunpeng Mu,Xinyue Xiong,Ana Pastore y Piontti,Alessandro Vespignani,Erik T Rosenstrom,Julie S Ivy,Maria E Mayorga,Julie L Swann,Guido España,Sean Cavany,Sean Moore,Alex Perkins,Thomas Hladish,Alexander Pillai,Kok Ben Toh,Ira Longini Jr,Shi Chen,Rajib Paul,Daniel Janies,Jean-Claude Thill,Anass Bouchnita,Kaiming Bi,Michael Lachmann,Spencer J Fox,Lauren Ancel Meyers,Ajitesh Srivastava,Przemyslaw Porebski,Srini Venkatramanan,Aniruddha Adiga,Bryan Lewis,Brian Klahn,Joseph Outten,Benjamin Hurt,Jiangzhuo Chen,Henning Mortveit,Amanda Wilson,Madhav Marathe,Stefan Hoops,Parantapa Bhattacharya,Dustin Machi,Betsy L Cadwell,Jessica M Healy,Rachel B Slayton,Michael A Johansson,Matthew Biggerstaff,Shaun Truelove,Michael C Runge,Katriona Shea,Cécile Viboud,Justin Lessler

Journal

Nature communications

Published Date

2023/11/20

Our ability to forecast epidemics far into the future is constrained by the many complexities of disease systems. Realistic longer-term projections may, however, be possible under well-defined scenarios that specify the future state of critical epidemic drivers. Since December 2020, the U.S. COVID-19 Scenario Modeling Hub (SMH) has convened multiple modeling teams to make months ahead projections of SARS-CoV-2 burden, totaling nearly 1.8 million national and state-level projections. Here, we find SMH performance varied widely as a function of both scenario validity and model calibration. We show scenarios remained close to reality for 22 weeks on average before the arrival of unanticipated SARS-CoV-2 variants invalidated key assumptions. An ensemble of participating models that preserved variation between models (using the linear opinion pool method) was consistently more reliable than any single …

Modelación matemática de la propagación del SARS-COV-2 en la ciudad de Bogotá, mediante modelos de tipo SEIR

Authors

Felipe Segundo Abril,Zulma M Cucunubá,David Santiago Quevedo,Juan David Serrano,Carlos Julio Pinto,Guido Camargo España,NT Domínguez,Diana Sofía Ríos

Journal

Boletín Epidemiológico Distrital-Bed

Published Date

2023/11/2

En este artículo se presentan la metodología y los resultados obtenidos a partir de la implementación de un modelo estocástico tipo SEIR para la dinámica del virus SARS-COV-2 en la ciudad de Bogotá, el cual considera las características etarias y de contacto específicas de la población de la ciudad. A partir de las proyecciones del modelo fue posible estimar la capacidad hospitalaria y funeraria de la ciudad necesaria para atender la emergencia sanitaria, lo cual sirvió como herramienta técnica de alto nivel para los tomadores de decisiones.

Multiple models for outbreak decision support in the face of uncertainty

Authors

Katriona Shea,Rebecca K Borchering,William JM Probert,Emily Howerton,Tiffany L Bogich,Shou-Li Li,Willem G van Panhuis,Cecile Viboud,Ricardo Aguás,Artur A Belov,Sanjana H Bhargava,Sean M Cavany,Joshua C Chang,Cynthia Chen,Jinghui Chen,Shi Chen,YangQuan Chen,Lauren M Childs,Carson C Chow,Isabel Crooker,Sara Y Del Valle,Guido España,Geoffrey Fairchild,Richard C Gerkin,Timothy C Germann,Quanquan Gu,Xiangyang Guan,Lihong Guo,Gregory R Hart,Thomas J Hladish,Nathaniel Hupert,Daniel Janies,Cliff C Kerr,Daniel J Klein,Eili Y Klein,Gary Lin,Carrie Manore,Lauren Ancel Meyers,John E Mittler,Kunpeng Mu,Rafael C Núñez,Rachel J Oidtman,Remy Pasco,Ana Pastore y Piontti,Rajib Paul,Carl AB Pearson,Dianela R Perdomo,T Alex Perkins,Kelly Pierce,Alexander N Pillai,Rosalyn Cherie Rael,Katherine Rosenfeld,Chrysm Watson Ross,Julie A Spencer,Arlin B Stoltzfus,Kok Ben Toh,Shashaank Vattikuti,Alessandro Vespignani,Lingxiao Wang,Lisa J White,Pan Xu,Yupeng Yang,Osman N Yogurtcu,Weitong Zhang,Yanting Zhao,Difan Zou,Matthew J Ferrari,David Pannell,Michael J Tildesley,Jack Seifarth,Elyse Johnson,Matthew Biggerstaff,Michael A Johansson,Rachel B Slayton,John D Levander,Jeff Stazer,Jessica Kerr,Michael C Runge

Journal

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Published Date

2023/5/2

Policymakers must make management decisions despite incomplete knowledge and conflicting model projections. Little guidance exists for the rapid, representative, and unbiased collection of policy-relevant scientific input from independent modeling teams. Integrating approaches from decision analysis, expert judgment, and model aggregation, we convened multiple modeling teams to evaluate COVID-19 reopening strategies for a mid-sized United States county early in the pandemic. Projections from seventeen distinct models were inconsistent in magnitude but highly consistent in ranking interventions. The 6-mo-ahead aggregate projections were well in line with observed outbreaks in mid-sized US counties. The aggregate results showed that up to half the population could be infected with full workplace reopening, while workplace restrictions reduced median cumulative infections by 82%. Rankings of …

Does ignoring transmission dynamics lead to underestimation of the impact of interventions against mosquito-borne disease?

Authors

Sean Cavany,John H Huber,Annaliese Wieler,Quan Minh Tran,Manar Alkuzweny,Margaret Elliott,Guido España,Sean M Moore,T Alex Perkins

Published Date

2023/8/1

New vector-control technologies to fight mosquito-borne diseases are urgently needed, the adoption of which depends on efficacy estimates from large-scale cluster-randomised trials (CRTs). The release of Wolbachia-infected mosquitoes is one promising strategy to curb dengue virus (DENV) transmission, and a recent CRT reported impressive reductions in dengue incidence following the release of these mosquitoes. Such trials can be affected by multiple sources of bias, however. We used mathematical models of DENV transmission during a CRT of Wolbachia-infected mosquitoes to explore three such biases: human movement, mosquito movement and coupled transmission dynamics between trial arms. We show that failure to account for each of these biases would lead to underestimated efficacy, and that the majority of this underestimation is due to a heretofore unrecognised bias caused by transmission …

Fusing an agent-based model of mosquito population dynamics with a statistical reconstruction of spatio-temporal abundance patterns

Authors

Sean M Cavany,Guido España,Alun L Lloyd,Gonzalo M Vazquez-Prokopec,Helvio Astete,Lance A Waller,Uriel Kitron,Thomas W Scott,Amy C Morrison,Robert C Reiner Jr,T Alex Perkins

Journal

PLoS computational biology

Published Date

2023/4/27

The mosquito Aedes aegypti is the vector of a number of medically-important viruses, including dengue virus, yellow fever virus, chikungunya virus, and Zika virus, and as such vector control is a key approach to managing the diseases they cause. Understanding the impact of vector control on these diseases is aided by first understanding its impact on Ae. aegypti population dynamics. A number of detail-rich models have been developed to couple the dynamics of the immature and adult stages of Ae. aegypti. The numerous assumptions of these models enable them to realistically characterize impacts of mosquito control, but they also constrain the ability of such models to reproduce empirical patterns that do not conform to the models’ behavior. In contrast, statistical models afford sufficient flexibility to extract nuanced signals from noisy data, yet they have limited ability to make predictions about impacts of mosquito control on disease caused by pathogens that the mosquitoes transmit without extensive data on mosquitoes and disease. Here, we demonstrate how the differing strengths of mechanistic realism and statistical flexibility can be fused into a single model. Our analysis utilizes data from 176,352 household-level Ae. aegypti aspirator collections conducted during 1999–2011 in Iquitos, Peru. The key step in our approach is to calibrate a single parameter of the model to spatio-temporal abundance patterns predicted by a generalized additive model (GAM). In effect, this calibrated parameter absorbs residual variation in the abundance time-series not captured by other features of the mechanistic model. We then used this calibrated parameter …

Prioritizing interventions for preventing COVID-19 outbreaks in military basic training

Authors

Guido España,T Alex Perkins,Simon D Pollett,Morgan E Smith,Sean M Moore,Paul O Kwon,Tara L Hall,Milford H Beagle Jr,Clinton K Murray,Shilpa Hakre,Sheila A Peel,Kayvon Modjarrad,Paul T Scott

Journal

PLoS Computational Biology

Published Date

2022/10/7

Like other congregate living settings, military basic training has been subject to outbreaks of COVID-19. We sought to identify improved strategies for preventing outbreaks in this setting using an agent-based model of a hypothetical cohort of trainees on a U.S. Army post. Our analysis revealed unique aspects of basic training that require customized approaches to outbreak prevention, which draws attention to the possibility that customized approaches may be necessary in other settings, too. In particular, we showed that introductions by trainers and support staff may be a major vulnerability, given that those individuals remain at risk of community exposure throughout the training period. We also found that increased testing of trainees upon arrival could actually increase the risk of outbreaks, given the potential for false-positive test results to lead to susceptible individuals becoming infected in group isolation and seeding outbreaks in training units upon release. Until an effective transmission-blocking vaccine is adopted at high coverage by individuals involved with basic training, need will persist for non-pharmaceutical interventions to prevent outbreaks in military basic training. Ongoing uncertainties about virus variants and breakthrough infections necessitate continued vigilance in this setting, even as vaccination coverage increases.

Designing school reopening in the COVID-19 pre-vaccination period in Bogotá, Colombia: A modeling study

Authors

Guido España,Zulma M Cucunubá,Hernando Diaz,Sean Cavany,Nelson Castañeda,Laura Rodriguez

Journal

PLOS global public health

Published Date

2022/6/15

The COVID-19 pandemic has affected millions of people around the world. In Colombia, 1.65 million cases and 43,495 deaths were reported in 2020. Schools were closed in many places around the world to slow down the spread of SARS-CoV-2. In Bogotá, Colombia, most of the public schools were closed from March 2020 until the end of the year. School closures can exacerbate poverty, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. To reconcile these two priorities in health and fighting poverty, we estimated the impact of school reopening for in-person instruction in 2021. We used an agent-based model of SARS-CoV-2 transmission calibrated to the daily number of deaths. The model includes schools that represent private and public schools in terms of age, enrollment, location, and size. We simulated school reopening at different capacities, assuming a high level of face-mask use, and evaluated the impact on the number of deaths in the city. We also evaluated the impact of reopening schools based on grade and multidimensional poverty index. We found that school at 35% capacity, assuming face-mask adherence at 75% in>8 years of age, had a small impact on the number of deaths reported in the city during a third wave. The increase in deaths was smallest when only pre-kinder was opened, and largest when secondary school was opened. At larger capacities, the impact on the number of deaths of opening pre-kinder was below 10%. In contrast, reopening other grades above 50% capacity substantially increased the number of deaths. Reopening schools based on their multidimensional poverty index resulted in a similar impact …

Evaluation of individual and ensemble probabilistic forecasts of COVID-19 mortality in the United States

Authors

Estee Y Cramer,Evan L Ray,Velma K Lopez,Johannes Bracher,Andrea Brennen,Alvaro J Castro Rivadeneira,Aaron Gerding,Tilmann Gneiting,Katie H House,Yuxin Huang,Dasuni Jayawardena,Abdul H Kanji,Ayush Khandelwal,Khoa Le,Anja Mühlemann,Jarad Niemi,Apurv Shah,Ariane Stark,Yijin Wang,Nutcha Wattanachit,Martha W Zorn,Youyang Gu,Sansiddh Jain,Nayana Bannur,Ayush Deva,Mihir Kulkarni,Srujana Merugu,Alpan Raval,Siddhant Shingi,Avtansh Tiwari,Jerome White,Neil F Abernethy,Spencer Woody,Maytal Dahan,Spencer Fox,Kelly Gaither,Michael Lachmann,Lauren Ancel Meyers,James G Scott,Mauricio Tec,Ajitesh Srivastava,Glover E George,Jeffrey C Cegan,Ian D Dettwiller,William P England,Matthew W Farthing,Robert H Hunter,Brandon Lafferty,Igor Linkov,Michael L Mayo,Matthew D Parno,Michael A Rowland,Benjamin D Trump,Yanli Zhang-James,Samuel Chen,Stephen V Faraone,Jonathan Hess,Christopher P Morley,Asif Salekin,Dongliang Wang,Sabrina M Corsetti,Thomas M Baer,Marisa C Eisenberg,Karl Falb,Yitao Huang,Emily T Martin,Ella McCauley,Robert L Myers,Tom Schwarz,Daniel Sheldon,Graham Casey Gibson,Rose Yu,Liyao Gao,Yian Ma,Dongxia Wu,Xifeng Yan,Xiaoyong Jin,Yu-Xiang Wang,YangQuan Chen,Lihong Guo,Yanting Zhao,Quanquan Gu,Jinghui Chen,Lingxiao Wang,Pan Xu,Weitong Zhang,Difan Zou,Hannah Biegel,Joceline Lega,Steve McConnell,VP Nagraj,Stephanie L Guertin,Christopher Hulme-Lowe,Stephen D Turner,Yunfeng Shi,Xuegang Ban,Robert Walraven,Qi-Jun Hong,Stanley Kong,Axel van de Walle,James A Turtle,Michal Ben-Nun,Steven Riley,Pete Riley,Ugur Koyluoglu,David DesRoches,Pedro Forli,Bruce Hamory,Christina Kyriakides,Helen Leis,John Milliken,Michael Moloney,James Morgan,Ninad Nirgudkar,Gokce Ozcan,Noah Piwonka,Matt Ravi,Chris Schrader,Elizabeth Shakhnovich,Daniel Siegel,Ryan Spatz,Chris Stiefeling,Barrie Wilkinson,Alexander Wong,Sean Cavany,Guido España,Sean Moore,Rachel Oidtman,Alex Perkins,David Kraus,Andrea Kraus,Zhifeng Gao,Jiang Bian,Wei Cao,Juan Lavista Ferres,Chaozhuo Li,Tie-Yan Liu,Xing Xie,Shun Zhang,Shun Zheng,Alessandro Vespignani,Matteo Chinazzi,Jessica T Davis,Kunpeng Mu,Ana Pastore y Piontti,Xinyue Xiong,Andrew Zheng,Jackie Baek,Vivek Farias,Andreea Georgescu

Journal

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Published Date

2022/4/12

Short-term probabilistic forecasts of the trajectory of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States have served as a visible and important communication channel between the scientific modeling community and both the general public and decision-makers. Forecasting models provide specific, quantitative, and evaluable predictions that inform short-term decisions such as healthcare staffing needs, school closures, and allocation of medical supplies. Starting in April 2020, the US COVID-19 Forecast Hub ( https://covid19forecasthub.org/ ) collected, disseminated, and synthesized tens of millions of specific predictions from more than 90 different academic, industry, and independent research groups. A multimodel ensemble forecast that combined predictions from dozens of groups every week provided the most consistently accurate probabilistic forecasts of incident deaths due to COVID-19 at the state and national …

Cost-effectiveness of dengue vaccination in Puerto Rico

Authors

Guido España,Andrew J Leidner,Stephen H Waterman,T Alex Perkins

Journal

PLoS neglected tropical diseases

Published Date

2021/7/26

An effective and widely used vaccine could reduce the burden of dengue virus (DENV) around the world. DENV is endemic in Puerto Rico, where the dengue vaccine CYD-TDV is currently under consideration as a control measure. CYD-TDV has demonstrated efficacy in clinical trials in vaccinees who had prior dengue virus infection. However, in vaccinees who had no prior dengue virus infection, the vaccine had a modestly elevated risk of hospitalization and severe disease. The WHO therefore recommended a strategy of pre-vaccination screening and vaccination of seropositive persons. To estimate the cost-effectiveness and benefits of this intervention (i.e., screening and vaccination of seropositive persons) in Puerto Rico, we simulated 10 years of the intervention in 9-year-olds using an agent-based model. Across the entire population, we found that 5.5% (4.6%-6.3%) of dengue hospitalizations could be averted. However, we also found that 0.057 (0.045–0.073) additional hospitalizations could occur for every 1,000 people in Puerto Rico due to DENV-naïve children who were vaccinated following a false-positive test results for prior exposure. The ratio of the averted hospitalizations among all vaccinees to additional hospitalizations among DENV-naïve vaccinees was estimated to be 19 (13–24). At a base case cost of vaccination of 382 USD, we found an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of 122,000 USD per QALY gained. Our estimates can provide information for considerations to introduce the CYD-TDV vaccine in Puerto Rico.

How radical is radical cure? Site-specific biases in clinical trials underestimate the effect of radical cure on Plasmodium vivax hypnozoites

Authors

John H Huber,Cristian Koepfli,Guido España,Narimane Nekkab,Michael T White,T Alex Perkins

Journal

Malaria Journal

Published Date

2021

Background Plasmodium vivax blood-stage relapses originating from re-activating hypnozoites are a major barrier for control and elimination of this disease. Radical cure is a form of therapy capable of addressing this problem. Recent clinical trials of radical cure have yielded efficacy estimates ranging from 65 to 94%, with substantial variation across trial sites. Methods An analysis of simulated trial data using a transmission model was performed to demonstrate that variation in efficacy estimates across trial sites can arise from differences in the conditions under which trials are conducted. Results The analysis revealed that differences in transmission intensity, heterogeneous exposure and relapse rate can yield efficacy estimates ranging as widely as 12–78%, despite simulating trial data under the uniform assumption …

Lying in wait: the resurgence of dengue virus after the Zika epidemic in Brazil

Authors

Anderson Fernandes Brito,Lais Ceschini Machado,Rachel J Oidtman,Márcio Junio Lima Siconelli,Quan Minh Tran,Joseph R Fauver,Rodrigo Dias de Oliveira Carvalho,Filipe Zimmer Dezordi,Mylena Ribeiro Pereira,Luiza Antunes de Castro-Jorge,Elaine Cristina Manini Minto,Luzia Márcia Romanholi Passos,Chaney C Kalinich,Mary E Petrone,Emma Allen,Guido Camargo España,Angkana T Huang,Derek AT Cummings,Guy Baele,Rafael Freitas Oliveira Franca,Benedito Antônio Lopes da Fonseca,T Alex Perkins,Gabriel Luz Wallau,Nathan D Grubaugh

Journal

Nature Communications

Published Date

2021/5/11

After the Zika virus (ZIKV) epidemic in the Americas in 2016, both Zika and dengue incidence declined to record lows in many countries in 2017–2018, but in 2019 dengue resurged in Brazil, causing ~2.1 million cases. In this study we use epidemiological, climatological and genomic data to investigate dengue dynamics in recent years in Brazil. First, we estimate dengue virus force of infection (FOI) and model mosquito-borne transmission suitability since the early 2000s. Our estimates reveal that DENV transmission was low in 2017–2018, despite conditions being suitable for viral spread. Our study also shows a marked decline in dengue susceptibility between 2002 and 2019, which could explain the synchronous decline of dengue in the country, partially as a result of protective immunity from prior ZIKV and/or DENV infections. Furthermore, we performed phylogeographic analyses using 69 newly sequenced …

Impacts of K-12 school reopening on the COVID-19 epidemic in Indiana, USA

Authors

Guido España,Sean Cavany,Rachel Oidtman,Carly Barbera,Alan Costello,Anita Lerch,Marya Poterek,Quan Tran,Annaliese Wieler,Sean Moore,T Alex Perkins

Journal

Epidemics

Published Date

2021/12/1

In the United States, schools closed in March 2020 due to COVID-19 and began reopening in August 2020, despite continuing transmission of SARS-CoV-2. In states where in-person instruction resumed at that time, two major unknowns were the capacity at which schools would operate, which depended on the proportion of families opting for remote instruction, and adherence to face-mask requirements in schools, which depended on cooperation from students and enforcement by schools. To determine the impact of these conditions on the statewide burden of COVID-19 in Indiana, we used an agent-based model calibrated to and validated against multiple data types. Using this model, we quantified the burden of COVID-19 on K-12 students, teachers, their families, and the general population under alternative scenarios spanning three levels of school operating capacity (50 %, 75 %, and 100 %) and three levels …

See List of Professors in Guido Camargo España University(University of Notre Dame)

Guido Camargo España FAQs

What is Guido Camargo España's h-index at University of Notre Dame?

The h-index of Guido Camargo España has been 17 since 2020 and 18 in total.

What are Guido Camargo España's top articles?

The articles with the titles of

Potential impact of annual vaccination with reformulated COVID-19 vaccines: lessons from the US COVID-19 Scenario Modeling Hub

Projecting the future impact of emerging SARS-CoV-2 variants under uncertainty: modeling the initial Omicron outbreak

Correction: Pandemic-associated mobility restrictions could cause increases in dengue virus transmission

Informing pandemic response in the face of uncertainty. An evaluation of the US COVID-19 Scenario Modeling Hub

Pandemic-associated mobility restrictions could cause increases in dengue virus transmission (vol 17, e0011032, 2023)

Economic analysis and health impacts of routine vaccination with TAK-003 dengue vaccine in San Juan, Puerto Rico

Impact of SARS-CoV-2 vaccination of children ages 5–11 years on COVID-19 disease burden and resilience to new variants in the United States, November 2021–March 2022: A multi …

Community incidence patterns drive the risk of SARS-CoV-2 outbreaks and alter intervention impacts in a high-risk institutional setting

...

are the top articles of Guido Camargo España at University of Notre Dame.

What are Guido Camargo España's research interests?

The research interests of Guido Camargo España are: Infectious disease modeling, Optimization, Control theory, Vector-borne diseases

What is Guido Camargo España's total number of citations?

Guido Camargo España has 1,340 citations in total.

What are the co-authors of Guido Camargo España?

The co-authors of Guido Camargo España are T Alex Perkins, Sean Cavany.

    Co-Authors

    H-index: 39
    T Alex Perkins

    T Alex Perkins

    University of Notre Dame

    H-index: 12
    Sean Cavany

    Sean Cavany

    University of Notre Dame

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