MOOD project is at the forefront of European research of infectious disease surveillance and modelling from a data science perspective, investigating the impact of global warming on disease outbreaks, and proposing innovations for building of One Health systems across Europe and the world.
In the table below are listed all MOOD publications. Use the filter to select the most relevant articles.
Mateo-Urdiales, Alberto; Fabiani, Massimo; Rosano, Aldo; Vescio, Maria Fenicia; Manso, Martina Del; Bella, Antonino; Riccardo, Flavia; Pezzotti, Patrizio; Regidor, Enrique; Andrianou, Xanthi
Socioeconomic patterns and COVID-19 outcomes before, during and after the lockdown in Italy (2020) Journal Article
In: Health & Place, vol. 71, pp. 102642, 2021, ISSN: 1353-8292.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: COVID-19, Deprivation, HEALTH Inequalities, SOCIAL Epidemiology
@article{MATEOURDIALES2021102642,
title = {Socioeconomic patterns and COVID-19 outcomes before, during and after the lockdown in Italy (2020)},
author = {Alberto Mateo-Urdiales and Massimo Fabiani and Aldo Rosano and Maria Fenicia Vescio and Martina Del Manso and Antonino Bella and Flavia Riccardo and Patrizio Pezzotti and Enrique Regidor and Xanthi Andrianou},
url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1353829221001386},
doi = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthplace.2021.102642},
issn = {1353-8292},
year = {2021},
date = {2021-01-01},
journal = {Health & Place},
volume = {71},
pages = {102642},
abstract = {The objective was to investigate the association between deprivation and COVID-19 outcomes in Italy during pre-lockdown, lockdown and post-lockdown periods using a retrospective cohort study with 38,534,169 citizens and 222,875 COVID-19 cases. Multilevel negative binomial regression models, adjusting for age, sex, population-density and region of residence were conducted to evaluate the association between area-level deprivation and COVID-19 incidence, case-hospitalisation rate and case-fatality. During lockdown and post-lockdown, but not during pre-lockdown, higher incidence of cases was observed in the most deprived municipalities compared with the least deprived ones. No differences in case-hospitalisation and case-fatality according to deprivation were observed in any period under study.},
keywords = {COVID-19, Deprivation, HEALTH Inequalities, SOCIAL Epidemiology},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}