Why coronavirus modeling is so hard to pin down

Jacob Turcotte/Staff

June 8, 2020

Why is the course of the COVID-19 pandemic so hard to predict? Public health modeling is complex, and there are many ways to go about it. 

The most well-known model is built by the University of Washington's Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME). That model predicts that COVID-19 cases in the United States will steadily decline over the summer, approaching zero in August. 

The IHME model uses a technique called “curve fitting” in which researchers try to find patterns from previous COVID-19 outbreaks in other countries and apply them to current ones. But many observers have called this model too optimistic.

Why We Wrote This

Clarity can be hard to find in times of uncertainty. This comic explores some of the ways scientists are using mathematical equations to light our path forward on the coronavirus.

Other models rely more heavily on epidemiological knowledge. They make predictions using mathematical equations that model how diseases are thought to spread through populations. These models predict that the peak will decline more slowly.

Part of the reason these kinds of predictions are so hard is that the model changes according to how we react to it. If a dire outlook prompts us to take stricter measures, then it might, in virtue of its own predictions, become less accurate. That’s because you are part of the system.

Why many in Ukraine oppose a ‘land for peace’ formula to end the war

Editor’s note: As a public service, all our coronavirus coverage is free. No paywall.