Update #1 27JUNE2015
Update #2 28JUNE2015
Sometimes people work from different playbooks.Update #2 28JUNE2015
In this instance, the data from the World Health Organization's (WHO) new list of Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) cases - with extra detail - uses a case identification key that's out of synchrony with that produced by the South Korean (SK) Health Authority which can be found in each of its posts announcing new MERS cases and deaths.
Attempting to link the two lists has mostly been an exercise in pedantry, but sometimes it is useful to know which case one is talking about when discussing an outbreak or cluster of disease....'Hey Bill, what didja think of that 70 year old MERS case who drove the ambulance carrying that infected 75 year old MERS case and then those others got MERS as well..?' doesn't really roll off the tongue does it?
Figure 2. What the graph above looked like before we had dates of illness onset. Many cases were 'moved' to earlier time points because report dates always follow onset of illness dates and they can follow by varying periods of time - sometimes a day, sometimes a week or more. |
If I've stuffed anything up or if you can solve my problem cases - please pass that info along and I'll update the files on this page. Hopefully the next WHO version will have addressed all of this anyway (it didn't but perhaps a future one will).
These are publicly available and you can download them for your own interest.
There is a download arrow at the top of the Google Drive page.
- Google Drive folder with MERS data files
https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B5sEcTjB5Ailfm1PcU1oNDF6M2hiaDduUDgzQUdxNlZxeHBkU0FHeVBRRFJkbHIxTmdjX3c&authuser=0
Updates...
- With the help of FluTrackers updated line list to cross check against, the first half of my list has been updated - some bugs fixed.
- After about 5 hours - on and off - FluTrackers helped me sort out a few errors and the latest version of my list has been uploaded into the the folder linked above. Some typos corrected.