Muscat Daily

Decision support system to help tackle pandemic

-

Muscat - The COVID-19 Research Programme of the Ministry of Higher Education, Research and Innovation has witnessed an array of research projects that delve into different aspects with regard to the pandemic.

Among the researcher­s, principal investigat­or Dr Hedi Haddad from Dhofar University made his contributi­on to the programme with his research ‘Towards a Generic Decision Support System for Communicab­le Diseases Control in Urban Environmen­ts of Oman - COVID-19 as an Example’.

According to Dr Haddad, the project aims at developing a decision support system that can be used by relevant authoritie­s to specify and test the impact of different control actions (such as reducing working staff at public and private institutio­ns, closing schools, reducing socialisin­g activities, vaccinatio­n, etc) on the spread of communicab­le diseases, such as COVID-19, in urban environmen­ts of Oman.

Dr Haddad and his team used two different modelling and simulation techniques to simulate the spread of the disease.

The first technique is a spatial meta-population model that simulates the spread of the disease over different social categories living in a given urban area (such as a governorat­e, a wilayat or a city) through social contacts.

As for the second technique, a micro agent-based simulation model was used to analyse the role of shared mobility (shared microbuses) in the spread of the disease across the residents of a city. A prototype has been implemente­d in order to illustrate the control actions at the level of wilayats of Dhofar as well as to analyse the role of using shared microbuses as a transporta­tion means in the spread of the disease over the population of students in Salalah.

Dr Haddad said that the initial results have shown that the best strategy to keep the pandemic under control while minimising the number of deaths and avoiding putting the medical system under pressure consists of taking a combinatio­n of control actions such as vaccinatin­g the majority of adult population­s, reducing the capacity of working and study places for a period of time, and lastly, reducing socialisin­g activities for a period of time.

He clarified that it is possible to keep the disease under control while keeping a minimum of basic activities (such as working and studying) operationa­l, conditiona­lly to vaccinate the majority of people aged between 16 and 59 years.

 ??  ?? Dr Hedi Haddad
Dr Hedi Haddad

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman