EGU21-9286, updated on 04 Mar 2021
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9286
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Tracking COVID-19 in Real-time: Challenges Faced and Lessons Learned

Lauren Gardner
Lauren Gardner
  • Johns Hopkins University, Civil and Systems Engineeering, United States of America (l.gardner@jhu.edu)

In response to the COVID-19 public health emergency, we developed an , first released publicly on January 22, 2020, hosted by the Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) at Johns Hopkins University. The dashboard visualizes and tracks the number of reported confirmed cases, deaths and recoveries for all countries affected by COVID-19. Further, all the data collected and displayed on the dashboard is made freely available in a GitHub repository, along with the live feature layers of the dashboard. The motivation behind the development of the dashboard was to provide researchers, public health authorities and the general public with a user-friendly tool to track the outbreak situation as it unfolds, critically, with access to the data underlying it. The demand for such a service became evident in the first weeks the dashboard was online, and by the end of February we were receiving over one billion requests for the dashboard feature layers every day, which since increased to between three and 4.5 billion requests every day. The dashboard has been featured on most major national and international media outlets (NYT, Washington Post, CNN, NPR, etc), and is either directly embedded in their websites, or used as the data source for in-house mapping efforts. Further, members of the public health community, including local and national governmental organizations, emergency response teams, public health agencies, and infectious disease researchers around the world rely on the dashboard and its data for informing and planning COVID-19 response. In this talk I will give a brief overview of the evolution of the dashboard, discuss some of the challenges we faced along the way, and suggest some methods by which disease tracking could be done better in the future.

How to cite: Gardner, L.: Tracking COVID-19 in Real-time: Challenges Faced and Lessons Learned, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9286, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9286, 2021.