Fields Notes, Winter/Spring 2019 Fields_Notes_19.1 | Page 20

Café Mathématique: the Flu, Math, and You November 21, 2018 • Fields Institute Organizers: Julien Arino (University of Manitoba), Jacques Belair (University of Montreal), Jane Heffernan (York University) and James Watmough (University of New Brunswick) The first of six Café Mathématiques was held at the Fields Institute on November 21, 2018. These general public events are designed to raise awareness of the application and relevance of mathematics in biomedical fields and to provide insight into topics of popular interest. The Cafés provide a fantastic opportunity for the general public to meet local researchers and discuss some of the most interesting research underway. Café Mathématiques typically take place at cafés, pubs, restaurants, or in community centres and are not intended to be lectures or seminars, but a way of getting research knowledge about mathematics issues of popular interest to the general public. The November 21 Café, titled The Flu, Math, and You, centred on infectious disease modelling, specifically, the mathematical modelling of influenza. Infectious disease modelling is a field of applied mathematics that involves the development and analysis of mathematical models, and dynamical systems, and computer simulations, so that characteristics of infectious diseases can be discerned. Given the recent 18 advances in public health contact tracing methods, laboratory detection, sequencing methods, computer hardware and the diverse nature of data sources, mathematical modelling provides the necessary tools to understand the complexities of infectious disease over many scales, from within a person, to a population. It also provides the means on which predictions and forecasts on the effectiveness of public health, pharmaceutical, and medical interventions can be made. The field is well known in research communities globally, but disease modeling (and even Mathematical Biology in general) is not well-known to the public. Moderator Jane Heffernan (York University) and Panelists Catherine Beauchemin (Ryerson University), David Fisman (U of T), Seyed Moghadas (York University and Pan-InfORM), and Edward Thommes (Sanofi Pasteur and University of Guelph) began the evening with short introductions to their work modelling influenza at the in- host, community, and population levels. This was followed by an engaging question period from the audience and discussions on the utility of mathematics to questions about public health and medicine. A lively debate and sharing of different ideas and anecdotes ensued. Future Cafés are being planned in Ottawa, Winnipeg, Montreal, Fredericton, and Vancouver.  From left to right: panellists Catherine Beauchemin (Ryerson University), Seyed Moghadas (York University and Pan-InfORM), David Fisman (U of T), Edward Thommes (Sanofi Pasteur and Guelph University) and moderator Jane Heffernan (York University).