Improving EWMA plans for detecting unusual increases in Poisson counts (Q1040032): Difference between revisions
From MaRDI portal
Set OpenAlex properties. |
ReferenceBot (talk | contribs) Changed an Item |
||
Property / cites work | |||
Property / cites work: Adaptive Thresholds / rank | |||
Normal rank | |||
Property / cites work | |||
Property / cites work: A Simple Risk-Adjusted Exponentially Weighted Moving Average / rank | |||
Normal rank | |||
Property / cites work | |||
Property / cites work: A Statistical Algorithm for the Early Detection of Outbreaks of Infectious Disease / rank | |||
Normal rank | |||
Property / cites work | |||
Property / cites work: A Unified Approach to Structural Change Tests Based on ML Scores,<i>F</i>Statistics, and OLS Residuals / rank | |||
Normal rank | |||
Property / cites work | |||
Property / cites work: Implementing a class of structural change tests: an econometric computing approach / rank | |||
Normal rank |
Latest revision as of 04:43, 2 July 2024
scientific article
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | Improving EWMA plans for detecting unusual increases in Poisson counts |
scientific article |
Statements
Improving EWMA plans for detecting unusual increases in Poisson counts (English)
0 references
23 November 2009
0 references
Summary: Automated public health records provide the necessary data for rapid outbreak detection. An adaptive exponentially weighted moving average (EWMA) plan is developed for signalling unusually high incidence when monitoring a time series of nonhomogeneous daily disease counts. A Poisson transitional regression model is used to fit background/expected trend in counts and provides ``one-day-ahead'' forecasts of the next day's count. Departures of counts from their forecasts are monitored. The paper outlines an approach for improving early outbreak data signals by dynamically adjusting the exponential weights to be efficient at signalling local persistent high side changes. We emphasise outbreak signals in steady-state situations; that is, changes that occur after the EWMA statistic had run through several in-control counts.
0 references
0 references