Several key metrics in public health convey the probability that a primary event will lead to a more serious secondary event in the future. These "severity rates" can change over the course of an epidemic in response to shifting conditions like new therapeutics, variants, or public health interventions. In practice, time-varying parameters such as the case-fatality rate are typically estimated from aggregate count data. Prior work has demonstrated that commonly-used ratio-based estimators can be highly biased, motivating the development of new methods. In this paper, we develop an adaptive deconvolution approach based on approximating a Poisson-binomial model for secondary events, and we regularize the maximum likelihood solution in this model with a trend filtering penalty to produce smooth but locally adaptive estimates of severity rates over time. This enables us to compute severity rates both retrospectively and in real time. Experiments based on COVID-19 death and hospitalization data, both real and simulated, demonstrate that our deconvolution estimator is generally more accurate than the standard ratio-based methods, and displays reasonable robustness to model misspecification.
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