Pandemic Prediction Checklist: H5N1

post by DirectedEvolution (AllAmericanBreakfast) · 2023-02-05T03:26:16.868Z · LW · GW · 9 comments

Contents

  Overall score: 5/14
  What is a pandemic prediction checklist?
  Special section: mink farms
  The checklist
    Transmissibility: efficiency, intra-community spread, inter-community spread, outside view
      1. TRANSMISSION ROUTE: is there an efficient transmission route, such as respiratory droplets, airborne transmission or via the bites of common jumping or flying insects?
      No.
      2. RAPID SPREAD: Does it seem to spread rapidly within affected communities, going from a few cases to a major local emergency within a month? If R0 has been credibly estimated, is the mean of the range higher than 1?
      No.
      3. GLOBAL SPREAD: Has it achieved community spread in non-endemic countries on at least 3 continents, and in a set of countries comprising 15% of the world population (excluding endemic countries) and a total of 15% of world GDP?
      No.
      4. SCREENING DIFFICULTIES: Is screening for the disease difficult due to test unavailability/unreliability/slowness, vector-based transmission, or transmissibility that is highest in early/asymptomatic stages?
      No
    Danger: case fatality rates, overwhelm, economic impacts, treatment
      5. CASE FATALITY RATE: If a credible case fatality rate has been estimated, is it 1% or higher? Alternatively, is the number of deaths divided by the number of confirmed cases being reported at around 5% or higher in at least 3 countries with reliable data?
      Yes.
      6. HEALTHCARE OVERWHELM: Is there a concern about hospital overwhelm or medical supply shortages in industrialized nations?
      No.
      7. WORKFORCE INFECTION: Does the disease heavily affect career-age people (age 25-65), or frequently leave survivors with lasting disability?
      Yes.
      8. LACK OF TREATMENTS AND VACCINES: Is there no clearly effective treatment or vaccine?
      Yes.
    Spread limitations: demographics, geography
      9. DEMOGRAPHICS: If some non-age-related demographics are heavily affected and others are not, do the heavily affected demographics amount to 15% or more of the population? If almost the whole population is about equally affected, mark this criteria as met.
      Yes
      10. GEOGRAPHY: Is the disease potentially transmissible across most of the world population (i.e. does not work via a vector that has a geographically limited range)?
      Yes
    Social effects: communications, shutdown, research, deaths
      11. IN THE NEWS: Has the disease made front page news on at least 3 different days in the New York Times in the last 2 months, and also received the WHO designation "public health emergency of international concern" or the equivalent?
      No
      12. QUARANTINES: Has there been a quarantine of a city with over 1 million inhabitants? In a country comprising at least 5% of world population or GDP, has there been a cancellation of major public events, or travel restrictions on passengers arriving from or via this country?
      No.
      13. PHARMA SPRINT: Has the pharmaceutical industry begun a widespread research effort to produce a novel treatment or novel vaccine, and/or has industry begun a major emergency effort to build physical infrastructure or equipment (hospitals, ventilators, etc)?
      No.
      14. DEATH TOLL: Have the death toll reached at least 2,000?
      No.
  Changelog
None
9 comments
Mink in cages
H5N1 likely has spread among minks, the first major spread from mammal to mammal

Changelog available at bottom of post.


Here's what we can do about it:

Five ways to stop a bird->mink->human H5N1 pandemic [EA · GW]

Overall score: 5/14

Note: if you haven't read news on the subject, the two articles linked here are a great starting point.

What is a pandemic prediction checklist?

I write these when a front-page news article raises the prospect of a new pandemic threat. This list collects what I think are the major risk factors for a pandemic. The point is not to predict what will happen, but to create a quantitative metric to track of how serious current conditions are.

I back-tested them on ancient and modern pandemics, such as the black death, various 20th century flu outbreaks, HIV, ebola, and COVID-19. COVID-19 scored a 13/14 during the worst days, but was limited by the fact that it targeted the elderly, meaning that the economy and healthcare system still had a healthy workforce.

Special section: mink farms

Virologists warn that H5N1, now rampaging through birds around the world, could invade other mink farms and become still more transmissible.

“This is incredibly concerning,” says Tom Peacock, a virologist at Imperial College London. “This is a clear mechanism for an H5 pandemic to start.” Isabella Monne, a veterinary researcher at the European Union’s Reference Laboratory for Avian Influenza in Italy, where the samples from Spain were sequenced, calls the finding “a warning bell.”

- Science

There are about 120 mink farms in the US producing 2 million pelts per year. Minks are killed at 6 months, so this suggests 1 million farmed minks in the USA.

50 million minks were produced annually as of 2020, primarily in China, Denmark, and Poland [Netherlands has phased out production since this article was written].

If there are roughly 120 mink farms per million farmed minks, this suggests a global total of around 6,000 mink farms spread across multiple continents.

COVID-19 affected over 450 mink farms, showing that mink farms are vulnerable targets to a disease capable of targeting minks.

Some mink farms appear to be enclosed, which may limit mink-bird contact:

Special report: As coronavirus hits Europe's fur trade, a look inside  China's mink farming industry - EIA
A Chinese mink farm, photograph by EIA international

Other mink farms appear to be open-air, where minks might be able to pull birds into their cages or otherwise come into close contact with infected birds:

Overview of the Fur Farming Industry - Fur Institute of Canada Fur  Institute of Canada
Photograph from the Fur Institute of Canada

The checklist

Transmissibility: efficiency, intra-community spread, inter-community spread, outside view

1. TRANSMISSION ROUTE: is there an efficient transmission route, such as respiratory droplets, airborne transmission or via the bites of common jumping or flying insects?

No.

2. RAPID SPREAD: Does it seem to spread rapidly within affected communities, going from a few cases to a major local emergency within a month? If R0 has been credibly estimated, is the mean of the range higher than 1?

No.

3. GLOBAL SPREAD: Has it achieved community spread in non-endemic countries on at least 3 continents, and in a set of countries comprising 15% of the world population (excluding endemic countries) and a total of 15% of world GDP?

No.

4. SCREENING DIFFICULTIES: Is screening for the disease difficult due to test unavailability/unreliability/slowness, vector-based transmission, or transmissibility that is highest in early/asymptomatic stages?

No

Danger: case fatality rates, overwhelm, economic impacts, treatment

5. CASE FATALITY RATE: If a credible case fatality rate has been estimated, is it 1% or higher? Alternatively, is the number of deaths divided by the number of confirmed cases being reported at around 5% or higher in at least 3 countries with reliable data?

Yes.

6. HEALTHCARE OVERWHELM: Is there a concern about hospital overwhelm or medical supply shortages in industrialized nations?

No.

7. WORKFORCE INFECTION: Does the disease heavily affect career-age people (age 25-65), or frequently leave survivors with lasting disability?

Yes.

8. LACK OF TREATMENTS AND VACCINES: Is there no clearly effective treatment or vaccine?

Yes.

Spread limitations: demographics, geography

Yes

10. GEOGRAPHY: Is the disease potentially transmissible across most of the world population (i.e. does not work via a vector that has a geographically limited range)?

Yes

Social effects: communications, shutdown, research, deaths

11. IN THE NEWS: Has the disease made front page news on at least 3 different days in the New York Times in the last 2 months, and also received the WHO designation "public health emergency of international concern" or the equivalent?

No

12. QUARANTINES: Has there been a quarantine of a city with over 1 million inhabitants? In a country comprising at least 5% of world population or GDP, has there been a cancellation of major public events, or travel restrictions on passengers arriving from or via this country?

No.

13. PHARMA SPRINT: Has the pharmaceutical industry begun a widespread research effort to produce a novel treatment or novel vaccine, and/or has industry begun a major emergency effort to build physical infrastructure or equipment (hospitals, ventilators, etc)?

No.

14. DEATH TOLL: Have the death toll reached at least 2,000?

No.

Changelog

9 comments

Comments sorted by top scores.

comment by Fer32dwt34r3dfsz (rodeo_flagellum) · 2023-02-05T16:49:25.682Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

For those who may not have seen and would like to make a prediction (on Metaculus; current uniform median community prediction is 15%)

Will WHO declare H5N1 a Public Health Emergency of International Concern before 2024?

comment by luidic · 2023-02-05T04:25:08.137Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I was going to comment "I wonder what AllAmericanBreakfast's thoughts are", but I guess that's already covered!

Replies from: AllAmericanBreakfast
comment by DirectedEvolution (AllAmericanBreakfast) · 2023-02-05T04:40:09.230Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Yes! I changed my display name but it's the same ol me.

comment by Oskar Mathiasen (oskar-mathiasen) · 2023-02-05T17:31:11.717Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Denmark culled all mink due to worries about a covid strain in mink. It has only recently (January 1 2023) become legal to farm mink in Denmark again.

comment by ChristianKl · 2023-02-05T15:27:15.367Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

You forgot the risk that someone takes the virus and runs gain-of-function experiments to find out how many mutations it needs to be infectious to humans and a thread to humans.

comment by bluefalcon · 2023-02-08T15:00:06.700Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

5% of world pop or GDP means China, India, and the US are the only countries used for the calculation in 12. Which seems questionable. 

 

Also, 11-13 and maybe even 6 and 14 are lagging indicators that seem quite unhelpful in making before-the-fact predictions

Replies from: AllAmericanBreakfast
comment by DirectedEvolution (AllAmericanBreakfast) · 2023-02-08T15:17:27.355Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

This checklist was established to be a portrait of what the world looked like right before the stock market crashed during the first months of COVID-19. The purpose is partly to give a semi-algorithmic way to ask how much the word looks like that again. At the time it had scored a 13/14 on this checklist, COVID-19 was not designated a pandemic and it was still controversial whether or not it was even ok to suggest that was on the horizon.

I originally wrote this checklist to be “prediction on easy mode.” Then I realized it was also valuable as a way to gather information and give a realistic assessment of where the latest new and scary disease is at right now.

During early COVID, we had a meme here that people have trouble “seeing the smoke,” just acknowledging that there were serious obvious problem signs, until an authority figure gave them permission to do so. This checklist was really designed as a way to avoid that problem. I fill it out when a disease makes front page news, I score by the system, I publish, I update, it’s as simple as that. I don’t have to ask if I should, and readers have transparency about my motives for publishing and how I scored it.

So there are a lot of considerations that have gone into turning this into what it is. Think of it as a checklist to facilitate predictions, a sort of jumping off point, not as the checklist itself being a prediction of what will happen.

Replies from: MondSemmel
comment by MondSemmel · 2023-02-11T01:16:27.703Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Yeah, the checklist seems great for what it's meant for. Thanks for taking the time to post it.

comment by MondSemmel · 2023-02-11T01:22:48.529Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Typos: (Feel free to delete.)

  • The changelog is still in 2022.
  • Question 14 has a typo in the title.
  • Tufecki -> Tufekci (throughout the post)
  • mark this criteria as met -> criterion (though apparently the other spelling sees some use, too)