Hosting visualisation and analytics tools for COVID-19 studies
Professor Shaun Handy, the Director of New Zealand Centre of Research Excellence Te Pūnaha Matatini (TPM); Daniel Barnett from the Department of Statistics and the study is led by Andrew Sporle, Honorary Academic from Department of Statistics and Director of iNZight Analytics Ltd. Platform and Services, Centre for eResearch
Nectar research cloud for public access
The Centre for eResearch is actively supporting several COVID-19 related projects at the University and on the national level during 2020 pandemic. These projects range from advising on Qualtrics platform used by Growing Up in New Zealand (GUiNZ), developing daily data transfer scripts for a complex contagion model to hosting two interactive COVID-19 modelling applications for public access to support a large number of users. Examples briefly described below:
COVID-19, Take Control
The eResearch Platform and Services team has been working with Professor Shaun Handy, the Director of New Zealand Centre of Research Excellence Te Pūnaha Matatini (TPM) to host the “COVID-19 Take Control” simulation tool. The application, developed by Audrey Lustig from Landcare Research, is not a decision-making tool but rather a model that illustrates and communicates with the public, and allows users to simulate how the COVID-19 pandemic might play out in Aotearoa, New Zealand under different conditions of collective cooperation. For example, the simulator models the effects of social distancing and hand washing hygiene. For detail exploration, visit (http://covid19takecontrol.nectar.auckland.ac.nz/covid19_takeControl/)
New Zealand COVID-19 Outcome Modelling and Visualisation
The New Zealand government has adopted a strategy of eliminating the virus from the population. Should elimination not be achieved, the strategy is to mitigate the spread of the disease throughout the population. Overseas reports of the COVID-19 epidemic indicate that it is having different impacts on different populations, ages, and regions. If the epidemic is not controlled in New Zealand, we can expect similar differences in impacts for different populations based on current overseas experience and the high levels of unequal impact of previous New Zealand epidemics. Extra support focused on vulnerable communities can ensure those in needs are maximally protected if elimination fails.