COVID-19: Could not predict second wave, say scientists working on mathematical models

COVID-19: Could not predict second wave, say scientists working on mathematical models

The mathematical models had predicted a second wave of coronavirus and its peak in the third week of April with daily cases of around 1 lakh.

The group is working on mathematical models to forecast the surge in COVID-19 cases.
BusinessToday.In
  • May 02, 2021,
  • Updated May 03, 2021, 1:20 AM IST

A group of scientists, mathematicians and experts, formed by the government last year to forecast surge in COVID-19 cases, said it could not predict the exact trajectory of the devastating second wave as the virus dynamics and its transmissibility changed substantially over time.

The group is working on mathematical models to forecast the surge in cases. On Sunday, India reported its highest single-day toll of 3,689 deaths due to COVID-19 infection and 3,92,488 new cases in the preceding 24 hours.

"The mathematical models had predicted a second wave of coronavirus and its peak in the third week of April with daily cases of around 1 lakh," a statement issued by the Department of Science and Technology, and signed by IIT Kanpur Professor Manindra Agrawal, Integrated Defense Staff Deputy Chief Madhuri Kanitkar and IIT Hyderabad Professor M Vidyasagar said.

"The nature of the virus has been changing very rapidly, and in such a scenario, any prediction must be continually readjusted, sometimes almost daily," it added.

Rejecting reports which said that the scientists working on the SUTRA model had cautioned in March about the second wave, but their warning was ignored, the statement said, "This is incorrect."

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"We are working closely with the government and our inputs have always been received positively. While we could not predict the exact nature of the second wave earlier, we continue our efforts to better estimate its future trajectory," they said, adding that the government had sought its inputs on April 2 when they predicted a peak would come around the third week of that month.

"A meeting was called on 2nd April to seek our inputs by one of the very senior officers of the government coordinating the national pandemic response. We indicated that the SUTRA model predicted the second wave to peak by the third week of April and to stay most likely around 1 lakh daily cases," the scientists said in the statement. However, the daily figures actually reported were thrice of the predicted numbers.

On April 15, India reported 2,00,739 cases, while it recorded 3,14,835 cases on April 22. Breaching all its previous records, the country hit a record daily high with over 4 lakh new infections on May 1. "Clearly, the model predictions in this instance were incorrect...,"the statement said.

A mathematical model, it said, can only predict the future with some certainty so long as virus dynamics and its transmissibility do not change substantially over time. Mathematical models can also provide a mechanism for predicting alternate scenarios corresponding to various policy decisions such as non-pharmaceutical interventions.

(With inputs from PTI)

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