Webinar on Modeling and Policy Change
Of "clever" models and "dumb" spreadsheets": what is more effective to drive
policy change?
Paolo Denti, PhD, Associate Professor at the University of Cape Town
When: Wednesday May 20, 2020, 12:00 to 1:00 pm EDT
Register for free at https://www.rosaandco.com/webinars
Abstract:
What often prevents modelling results from contributing to policy change is not
lack of good science, but ineffective communication to the target audience of
clinicians and decision-makers.
Dosing of anti-infectives in children is a glaring example of this. While the
theory of maturation and allometric scaling are widely assumed as the gold
standard within the pharmacokinetic modelling community, a number of
international guidelines for dosing in children is still based on weight-bands
targeting the same mg/kg dose as in adults. This happens for drugs in neglected
diseases, when no directly observed data is available in children, but also for
common diseases such as HIV or tuberculosis. This results in millions of
children potentially receiving sub-optimal doses.
How can we get across the message of our models and use it to improve policy?
Sometimes a simple and easy-to-use solution like an Excel spreadsheet can do
the trick better than sleek-looking Visual Predictive Checks and impressively
low parameter precision or shrinkage values.