Human mobility patterns predict divergent epidemic dynamics among cities
Authored by Benjamin D Dalziel, Babak Pourbohloul, Stephen P Ellner
Date Published: 2013
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2013.0763
Sponsors:
National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
Canadian Institutes of Health Research
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Model Documentation:
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Abstract
The epidemic dynamics of infectious diseases vary among cities, but it
is unclear how this is caused by patterns of infectious contact among
individuals. Here, we ask whether systematic differences in human
mobility patterns are sufficient to cause inter-city variation in
epidemic dynamics for infectious diseases spread by casual contact
between hosts. We analyse census data on the mobility patterns of every
full-time worker in 48 Canadian cities, finding a power-law relationship
between population size and the level of organization in mobility
patterns, where in larger cities, a greater fraction of workers travel
to work in a few focal locations. Similarly sized cities also vary in
the level of organization in their mobility patterns, equivalent on
average to the variation expected from a 2.64-fold change in population
size. Systematic variation in mobility patterns is sufficient to cause
significant differences among cities in infectious disease dynamics-even
among cities of the same size-according to an individual-based model of
airborne pathogen transmission parametrized with the mobility data. This
suggests that differences among cities in host contact patterns are
sufficient to drive differences in infectious disease dynamics and
provides a framework for testing the effects of host mobility patterns
in city-level disease data.
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