School closure policies at municipality level for mitigating influenza spread: a model-based evaluation
Authored by Marco Ajelli, Stefano Merler, Laura Fumanelli, Constanze Ciavarella, Ciro Cattuto
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1186/s12879-016-1918-z
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Background: Nearly every year Influenza affects most countries worldwide
and the risk of a new pandemic is always present. Therefore, influenza
is a major concern for public health. School-age individuals are often
the most affected group, suggesting that the inclusion in preparedness
plans of school closure policies may represent an option for influenza
mitigation. However, their applicability remains uncertain and their
implementation should carefully be weighed on the basis of cost-benefit
considerations.
Methods: We developed an individual-based model for influenza
transmission integrating data on sociodemography and time use of the
Italian population, face-to-face contacts in schools, and influenza
natural history. The model was calibrated on the basis of
epidemiological data from the 2009 influenza pandemic and was used to
evaluate the effectiveness of three reactive school closure strategies, all based on school absenteeism.
Results: In the case of a new influenza pandemic sharing similar
features with the 2009 H1N1 pandemic, gradual school closure strategies
(i.e., strategies closing classes first, then grades or the entire
school) could lead to attack rate reduction up to 20-25 \% and to peak
weekly incidence reduction up to 50-55 \%, at the cost of about three
school weeks lost per student. Gradual strategies are quite stable to
variations in the start of policy application and to the threshold on
student absenteeism triggering class (and school) closures. In the case
of a new influenza pandemic showing different characteristics with
respect to the 2009 H1N1 pandemic, we found that the most critical
features determining the effectiveness of school closure policies are
the reproduction number and the age-specific susceptibility to
infection, suggesting that these two epidemiological quantities should
be estimated early on in the spread of a new pandemic for properly
informing response planners.
Conclusions: Our results highlight a potential beneficial effect of
reactive gradual school closure policies in mitigating influenza spread, conditioned on the effort that decision makers are willing to afford.
Moreover, the suggested strategies are solely based on routinely
collected and easily accessible data (such as student absenteeism
irrespective of the cause and ILI incidence) and thus they appear to be
applicable in real world situations.
Tags
Community
outbreak
transmission
Pandemic influenza
United-states
Infectious-diseases
Virus
Human-behavior
A h1n1