06-28, 15:10–15:15 (Europe/Tirane), UBT E / N209 - Floor 3
The recognition of spatial and temporal patterns in pandemic distribution plays a pivotal role in guiding policy approaches to its management, containment and elimination.
To provide information about spatial and temporal patterns of a phenomenon four steps are required: the collection of data, the organization and management of data, data representation as tables, charts and maps, and finally their analysis with geo-statistical tools (Trias-Llimós et al 2020).
The collection of pandemic data poses a challenge: on the one hand, the highest spatial and temporal resolution is required to make the detection of patterns more effective (Carballada et al. 2021), allowing the application of containment tools as local as possible, on the other hand it presents major privacy problems.
For these reasons public COVID-19 datasets and maps are usually available at low spatial and temporal resolutions (Franch-Pardo et al. 2020), because averaging over time and space automatically provides a layer of anonymization by data aggregation.
In this research project, a database has been built and is continuously updated for the COVID-19 pandemic in the Trentino region, in the eastern Italian alps, near the border between Italy and Austria.
The Province of Trento, with a population of about 542,000 inhabitants, represents the primary corridor for transporting people and products between Italy, Austria and Germany. The area has also an intense tourist development, in particular for winter sports, with the presence of ski slopes, ski lifts and hotels.
These two features have been an important role in the diffusion of COVID-19 in the region because the movement of people, both through the main communication routes and the movement of tourists in the lateral valleys, has been the main driver in the virus spread. Therefore, the availability of a reliable database collecting COVID-19 cases, is fundamental to map the pandemic evolution (Mollalo et al. 2020).
At the same time the status of autonomous region of the Provincia Autonoma di Trento, allows greater discretion in the organization of health data, their scientific use and their dissemination. In this context the local government and the University of Trento, in particular its the Geo-cartographic Center (GeCo), have signed an Agreement for sharing COVID-19 data and their analysis (Gabellieri et al. 2021).
The resulting dataset collects the official number of the infected, clinically recovered, deceased people, and their age group. The dataset contains daily data at the municipal level, starting from the beginning of the COVID-19 epidemic in March 2020 until the whole 2022.
Data anonymization has been carried out by aggregating data on a weekly basis and by hiding data with small numbers, with the threshold set to 5.
The sole use of official data created by public agencies tasked with managing public health, specifically the local Health Authority (Agenzia Provinciale per i Servizi Sanitari, APSS), ensures the validity of their production process and strict observance of patient data confidentiality. rules
A database management system and a WebGIS has been created using Free and Open Source Software.
The back end of the system runs a database management system (DBMS), which manages the data, including the spatial components, and a web server, which provides access to the users.
The DBMS runs on MySQL, a relational database management system (RDBMS) available as Free Software under the GNU General Public License. MySQL provides the capability of storing and processing geographic data, following the OpenGIS data model. A custom procedure has been created to update the dataset, with the capability to import data from suitably formatted spreadsheets. A roll back option is provided in case of failure of the import procedure. Data base management and update functionalities are available only to authenticated WebGIS administrators and accessible through a dedicated web page.
The main goals in the design and development of the WebGIS have been the ease of use and clarity of data presentation, both on large screens and on mobile devices. This approach maximizes the user performance while exploring the data, by splitting the processing tasks and load between server and clients.
The system is comprised of a back end, running on a server, and a front end running in the user’s web browser.
Cartographic data include background maps from the OpenStreetMap (OSM) project and a map of the municipalities boundaries for the Province of Trento, which serves as a spatial basis for the dataset. Tabular data are linked to the respective geographic components using the unique municipal code field as key. OSM maps are available with the Open Database License, while the municipalities boundaries have been provided by the Provincia Autonoma di Trento under a CC0 1.0 Universal (CC0 1.0) Public Domain Dedication license.
A virtual machine that houses both software and data powers the system on the server side.
The client side uses the Open Source Leaflet Javascript language libraries, available under BSD 2-Clause License, with custom scripts, which create the user interface and render geographic data into maps. This approach ensures flexibility and responsiveness on on desktop and mobile devices.
The exchange of the data between the server and the client is performed using geojson tables, created on the fly according to the user’s request. In a similar way, the data temporal variation graph is created by the js library, which automatically reads the dates and times of the analyses, extracts the relevant data from the database and display the graph.
As long as they fit within the database structure, the system automatically uses all of the accessible data. To protect the privacy of the patients, WebGIS users cannot access the source data even though maps and graphs can be downloaded as pictures.
The WebGIS is available at http://covid19mappa-trentino.geco.unitn.it/geosmart/index.php
Geo-statistical analysis aimed at the detection of spatial and temporal patters is underway.
Paolo Zatelli is born in Pavia on March the 2nd 1968. He obtained the diploma at A. Roiti High School of Ferrara in July 1987. He graduated in Environmental and Land Engineering at the University of Trento cum laude in 1994.
He obtained a PhD degree in Topographic and Geodetic Science with the thesis "Application of
wavelets in geodesy" at the Polytechnic of Milan in 1998.
From February 2001 to 2016 he is researcher and from 2016 associate professor of Geomatics at the Department of Civil, Environmental and Mechanical Engineering of the University of Trento, Italy.
The didactic activity regards Survey, Survey and statistics, Photogrammetry, Numerical cartography and GIS, Remote sensing and GIS, Mathematical and statistical methods. He is coordinator and lecturer for the course "Environmental data management and analysis with GIS", for the Doctoral School in Civil, Environmental and Mechanical Engineering of the University of Trento.
He organizes and teaches in several courses for GIS professionals, such as "Theorical and practical course on GRASS, Free and Open Source GIS and GEODATABASE", "GIS theory and applications" and "GPS, from theory to applications", and masters, such as the second level Master "Analysis and management of Geotechnical systems -SIGEO".
The research activity regards different aspects of the land survey and of treatment of related
information, both metric and semantic, including therefore modern data acquisition, efficient
elaboration and integrated management techniques. The study of modern survey methods includes both point positioning techniques, such as GPS, and global methods such as laser scanning, remote sensing and digital photogrammetry. Further researches include the study of high resolution earth gravity field determination by satellite geodesy. Methods for multiresolution data analysis for efficient data representation and filtering have been developed.
Geographic data treatment and management have been studied with the use of GIS, where new
functionalities have been implemented for the creation of environmental models.
He has acted as local and national research project coordinator, reviewer for international and national journals.
He has organized international and national meetings and he has been part of the committees of several conferences, for which he has organized many workshops.