Simulation suggests that rapid activation of social distancing can arrest epidemic development due to a novel strain of influenza
Authored by George J Milne, Joel K Kelso, Heath Kelly
Date Published: 2009
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-9-117
Sponsors:
Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Background: Social distancing interventions such as school closure and
prohibition of public gatherings are present in pandemic influenza
preparedness plans. Predicting the effectiveness of intervention
strategies in a pandemic is difficult. In the absence of other evidence, computer simulation can be used to help policy makers plan for a
potential future influenza pandemic. We conducted simulations of a small
community to determine the magnitude and timing of activation that would
be necessary for social distancing interventions to arrest a future
pandemic.
Methods: We used a detailed, individual-based model of a real community
with a population of approximately 30,000. We simulated the effect of
four social distancing interventions: school closure, increased
isolation of symptomatic individuals in their household, workplace
nonattendance, and reduction of contact in the wider community. We
simulated each of the intervention measures in isolation and in several
combinations; and examined the effect of delays in the activation of
interventions on the final and daily attack rates.
Results: For an epidemic with an R(0) value of 1.5, a combination of all
four social distancing measures could reduce the final attack rate from
33\% to below 10\% if introduced within 6 weeks from the introduction of
the first case. In contrast, for an R(0) of 2.5 these measures must be
introduced within 2 weeks of the first case to achieve a similar
reduction; delays of 2, 3 and 4 weeks resulted in final attack rates of
7\%, 21\% and 45\% respectively. For an R(0) of 3.5 the combination of
all four measures could reduce the final attack rate from 73\% to 16\%, but only if introduced without delay; delays of 1, 2 or 3 weeks resulted
in final attack rates of 19\%, 35\% or 63\% respectively. For the higher
R(0) values no single measure has a significant impact on attack rates.
Conclusion: Our results suggest a critical role of social distancing in
the potential control of a future pandemic and indicate that such
interventions are capable of arresting influenza epidemic development, but only if they are used in combination, activated without delay and
maintained for a relatively long period.
Tags
transmission
Pandemic influenza
United-states
Interventions
School closure
Resistance
Mitigation strategies
Community
mitigation
H5n1 virus
Us cities