Wageningen World
Insight into spread of coronavirus due to people's behavior with SamenSlimOpen tool
Epidemiologist Quirine ten Bosch thought up the model SamenSlimOpen (‘Open Smart Together’), which shows how human behaviour affects the spread of the coronavirus. She doesn’t think the way Netherlands opened up last summer was very clever: ‘In the decision-making before the summer, superspreading events were not sufficiently taken into account.’
Quirine ten Bosch has been much in demand as a guest speaker in the last year and a half. She has given interviews on radio and television, and the press have sought her out as well. Which is logical for an epidemiologist of infectious diseases who developed a simulation model for COVID-19 called SamenSlimOpen – Open Smart Together.
It is sheer coincidence that she ended up in this research field, says Ten Bosch. Fifteen years ago, as a student of Medical Biology at Groningen, she was thinking of going into the neurosciences. But after her Batchelor’s she realized that global health was more up her street, and she started a Master’s in Epidemiology at Utrecht. Since then, she has done research on elephantiasis, dengue fever and the plague epidemic in Madagascar, the largest in recent history. In 2019, she was appointed assistant professor of Veterinary Epidemiology at Wageningen, where most of her research has been on zoonoses – infectious diseases that jump from animals to humans.
When research financier ZonMw put out a call for Covid-related projects a year ago, Ten Bosch set to work with Delft University of Technology to develop a model that seeks to identify how human behaviour affects the behaviour of the coronavirus. How much of a problem is it if people don’t maintain one and a half metre’s distance from each other? How risky is it to sing together? And which is the most effective measure for preventing transmission? To get clarity on this, the researchers developed an online tool that shows how restaurant owners can make their restaurants Covid-proof. The model can easily be used for other contexts such as festivals or conferences as well.