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Decision Making in COVID-19: It’s Personal

Michael N. Liebman, Managing Director, IPQ Analytics LLC, and Adj. Professor, Drexel College of Medicine
December 16, 2020 (Invited Talk)

Abstract: COVID-19 models have focused on forecasting the number of infections and death. The results vary greatly over both the course of the pandemic and among modeling groups. Even when forecasts are accurate, the models provide limited insights into the disease’s diffusion, peoples’ risks, and the impact of behavior and potential actional planning for the individual patient. Physicians’ decisions when treating the disease exemplify the complexities that decision-makers face. Physicians must consider multiple presentations of COVID-19 infection, including new mutations, comorbidities (other diseases), and attributes (weight, smoker or not, lifestyle, etc.). Symptoms are multi-faceted and evolve along barely known trajectories that may differ significantly among patient populations. A physician begins by seeing only one point from this trajectory of a patient’s journey, and all subsequent data continue to be "corrupted” by treatment decisions.

This situation exemplifies many real-world decisions. By studying policies and the bases for managing COVID-19 patients, we can learn about decision making in complex systems. I have been involved in the frontlines of treatment and policy-making for COVID-19. In this presentation, I describe some of my experiences and the lessons learned about modeling and the systems we have constructed to deal with real-world complexity.

Click on the file below to hear a sample of the presentation.  

Click here for access to the full video.

SDP membership is required for access to this webinar.

Keywords: analysis and modeling anamod, risk and uncertainty riskunc, Covid, disease, patients, pandemic

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