The role of population heterogeneity and human mobility in the spread of pandemic influenza
Authored by Marco Ajelli, Stefano Merler
Date Published: 2010
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2009.1605
Sponsors:
European Union
Future Enabling technologies program of the European Commission
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Little is known on how different levels of population heterogeneity and
different patterns of human mobility affect the course of pandemic
influenza in terms of timing and impact. By employing a large-scale
spatially explicit individual-based model, founded on a highly detailed
model of the European populations and on a careful analysis of air and
railway transportation data, we provide quantitative measures of the
influence of such factors at the European scale. Our results show that
Europe has to be prepared to face a rapid diffusion of a pandemic
influenza, because of the high mobility of the population, resulting in
the early importation of the first cases from abroad and highly
synchronized local epidemics. The impact of the epidemic in European
countries is highly variable because of the marked differences in the
sociodemographic structure of European populations. R(0), cumulative
attack rate and peak daily attack rate depend heavily on
sociodemographic parameters, such as the size of household groups and
the fraction of workers and students in the population.
Tags
epidemics
models
disease
Strategies
United-states
Waves
Spatial hierarchies
Passenger