Home

RT

Rt, written as R_t, is a notation used primarily in epidemiology to denote the effective reproduction number at time t. It represents the average number of secondary infections produced by a single infectious individual in a population at time t, accounting for changing immunity levels, behavioral patterns, and public health interventions. Unlike the basic reproduction number R0, which describes transmission in a fully susceptible population with no interventions, R_t varies over time as conditions change. When R_t exceeds 1, transmission is, on average, expanding; when R_t is below 1, the outbreak is contracting; an R_t near 1 implies sustained transmission at a constant level.

Estimating R_t requires observed incidence data and knowledge of the generation interval or serial interval. Common

Interpretation caveats: R_t is an average and can mask heterogeneity in transmission, such as superspreading events

In broader use, the symbol R_t may appear in mathematical modeling to denote a time-dependent rate or

approaches
include
Bayesian
methods
and
time-window
estimates
that
infer
R_t
from
case
counts
and
the
distribution
of
generation
times.
R_t
has
been
widely
used
to
assess
the
impact
of
public
health
measures,
vaccination,
and
behavior
change
during
seasonal
influenza
outbreaks
and
the
COVID-19
pandemic.
or
clusters.
Reporting
delays,
changes
in
testing,
and
data
quality
can
bias
estimates.
Therefore,
R_t
is
most
informative
when
interpreted
alongside
incidence
trends
and
other
epidemiological
indicators,
rather
than
in
isolation.
parameter,
with
the
subscript
t
indicating
dependence
on
time.