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Serial interval label:question #85
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Hi Vanessa, |
Hi,
Thank you very much for the answer and sorry for the delay.
I actually was thinking about the interval between an infection and the
admission of the secondary case, but now I realize this does not make sense.
I think you are correct, it is reasonable to say that the "admission
interval" has the same average as the serial interval, but it is
interesting to consider greater variability.
Best,
Vanessa
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Em qua., 17 de jun. de 2020 às 05:21, Thibaut Jombart <
[email protected]> escreveu:
… Hi Vanessa,
that is good point. In using this we implicitly assume that admissions are
shifted from the onset of symptoms by a constant number of days, which in
practice is not the case. In practice the admission interval (if we call it
that) may be more dispersed than the serial interval. This said, I would
not necessarily expect there to be a bias / different average time. Why
would you expect the interval between admissions to be shorter than onset
of symptoms (or infections, but that would be generation time, not serial
interval)?
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Hi, thank you for the app. I have a theoretical question actually.
Can I use the serial interval distribution for incident cases (like the one from Li et al) as the serial interval distribution for the hospitalization series?
I suppose the interval between two infections is smaller than the interval between two hospitalizations in the same chain.
Best,
Vanessa
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