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Article
How to Minimize the Attack Rate during Multiple Influenza Outbreaks in a Heterogeneous Population
PLoS One (2012)
  • Isaac Chun-Hai Fung, Georgia Southern University
  • Rustom Antia, Emory University
  • Andreas Handel, Emory University
Abstract
Background: If repeated interventions against multiple outbreaks are not feasible, there is an optimal level of control during the first outbreak. Any control measures above that optimal level will lead to an outcome that may be as sub-optimal as that achieved by an intervention that is too weak. We studied this scenario in more detail.

Method: An age-stratified ordinary-differential-equation model was constructed to study infectious disease outbreaks and control in a population made up of two groups, adults and children. The model was parameterized using influenza as an example. This model was used to simulate two consecutive outbreaks of the same infectious disease, with an intervention applied only during the first outbreak, and to study how cumulative attack rates were influenced by population composition, strength of inter-group transmission, and different ways of triggering and implementing the interventions. We assumed that recovered individuals are fully immune and the intervention does not confer immunity.

Results/Conclusion: The optimal intervention depended on coupling between the two population sub-groups, the length, strength and timing of the intervention, and the population composition. Population heterogeneity affected intervention strategies only for very low cross-transmission between groups. At more realistic values, coupling between the groups led to synchronization of outbreaks and therefore intervention strategies that were optimal in reducing the attack rates for each subgroup and the population overall coincided. For a sustained intervention of low efficacy, early intervention was found to be best, while at high efficacies, a delayed start was better. For short interventions, a delayed start was always advantageous, independent of the intervention efficacy. For most scenarios, starting the intervention after a certain cumulative proportion of children were infected seemed more robust in achieving close to op
Keywords
  • Attack rate,
  • Influenza outbreaks,
  • Heterogeneous population
Disciplines
Publication Date
June 11, 2012
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0036573
Publisher Statement
© 2012 Fung et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Article obtained from PloS One.
Citation Information
Isaac Chun-Hai Fung, Rustom Antia and Andreas Handel. "How to Minimize the Attack Rate during Multiple Influenza Outbreaks in a Heterogeneous Population" PLoS One Vol. 7 Iss. 6 (2012) ISSN: 1932-6203
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/isaac_fung1/50/