Title: Computer-Aided Design
1Computer-Aided Design
- Nathaniel Hupert, M.D., M.P.H.
- Assistant Professor of Public Health and Medicine
- Division of Outcomes and Effectiveness Research
- Weill Medical College of Cornell University
2Guiding Questions
- What are the critical components of a mass
vaccination campaign? - What role can spreadsheet models play in
forecasting resource requirements for mass
vaccination campaigns? - What are the limitations of computer modeling in
developing mass vaccination plans?
3Components of Mass Prophylaxis Plan
4SAMPLE PATIENT FLOW DIAGRAM FOR MASS ANTIBIOTIC
DISPENSING
SAMPLE PATIENT FLOW DIAGRAM FOR MASS ANTIBIOTIC
DISPENSING
HEALTHY PEOPLE GET PROPHYLAXIS AMBULATORY SICK
GET TREATMENT
VERY SICK GET TRANSPORT TO MEDICAL FACILITY
Created by the Department to Public Health, Weill
Medical College of Cornell Univeristy, NYCOEM,
and NYCDOHMH
Created by the Department of Public Health, Weill
Medical College of Cornell University, NYCOEM,
and NYCDOHMH
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6Steady-state assumption
- Steady state develops if r R/ST ? 1, where R
patient arrival rate - S staff
- T mean service time
- When r 1, then S RT, or
7SCHEMATIC FLOW THROUGH WEILL/CORNELL SMALLPOX
VACCINATION MODEL
R
8Weill/Cornell Smallpox Vaccination Staffing Model
PRE-EVENT
9Weill/Cornell Smallpox Vaccination Staffing Model
POST-EVENT
10SAMPLE OUTPUT OF WEILL/CORNELL SMALLPOX
VACCINATION MODEL
11SAMPLE OUTPUT OF WEILL/CORNELL SMALLPOX
VACCINATION MODEL
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14Limitations
- Accuracy of any model depends on the quality of
the underlying data - Processing times are critical variable
- Output is design-specific
- A differently designed vaccination center may
give a different result - Multiple scalable centers with externally
controlled patient flow - Feasible but requires law enforcement input
- These numbers reflect only critical dispensing
staff and do not include support staff for the
centers or distribution and logistics staff
15Conclusions
- Spreadsheet modeling allows planners to think
with numbers when designing mass prophylaxis
response strategies - Modeling forces critical examination of
- Assumptions about vaccination center layout and
processes - Availability of resources
- Model estimates are useful data to guide planning
but do not replace the real thing LIVE,
REALISTIC EXERCISES
16Acknowledgments
- Co-Investigators
- Jason Cuomo, MPH
- Mark A. Callahan, MD
- Alvin I. Mushlin, MD, ScM
- NYC Office of Emergency Management
- Edward Gabriel, MPA, AEMT-P
- Sam Benson, AEMT-P
- Anita Sher, MIA
- U.S. DHHS, Office of the Asst. Secy for Public
Health Preparedness - Capt. Ann Knebel, RN, DNSc
- NYC Dept. of Health, Communicable Disease Unit
- Marci Layton, MD
- Sue Blank, MD, MPH
- NY Presbyterian Healthcare System
- Eliot Lazar, MD
- Arthur Klein, MD
- Neal Flomenbaum, MD