The role of vaccination coverage, individual behaviors, and the public health response in the control of measles epidemics: an agent-based simulation for California
Authored by William D Wheaton, Fengchen Liu, Wayne T A Enanoria, Jennifer Zipprich, Seth Blumberg, Kathleen Harriman, Sarah F Ackley, Justine L Allpress, Travis C Porco
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1186/s12889-015-1766-6
Sponsors:
United States National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
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Abstract
Background: Measles cases continue to occur among susceptible
individuals despite the elimination of endemic measles transmission in
the United States. Clustering of disease susceptibility can threaten
herd immunity and impact the likelihood of disease outbreaks in a highly
vaccinated population. Previous studies have examined the role of
contact tracing to control infectious diseases among clustered
populations, but have not explicitly modeled the public health response
using an agent-based model.
Methods: We developed an agent-based simulation model of measles
transmission using the Framework for Reconstructing Epidemiological
Dynamics (FRED) and the Synthetic Population Database maintained by RTI
International. The simulation of measles transmission was based on
interactions among individuals in different places: households, schools, daycares, workplaces, and neighborhoods. The model simulated different
levels of immunity clustering, vaccination coverage, and contact
investigations with delays caused by individuals' behaviors and/or the
delay in a health department's response. We examined the effects of
these characteristics on the probability of uncontrolled measles
outbreaks and the outbreak size in 365 days after the introduction of
one index case into a synthetic population.
Results: We found that large measles outbreaks can be prevented with
contact investigations and moderate contact rates by having (1) a very
high vaccination coverage (>= 95\%) with a moderate to low level of
immunity clustering (<= 0.5) for individuals aged less than or equal to
18 years, or (2) a moderate vaccination coverage (85\% or 90\%) with no
immunity clustering for individuals (<= 18 years of age), a short
intervention delay, and a high probability that a contact can be traced.
Without contact investigations, measles outbreaks may be prevented by
the highest vaccination coverage with no immunity clustering for
individuals (<= 18 years of age) with moderate contact rates; but for
the highest contact rates, even the highest coverage with no immunity
clustering for individuals (<= 18 years of age) cannot completely
prevent measles outbreaks.
Conclusions: The simulation results demonstrated the importance of
vaccination coverage, clustering of immunity, and contact investigations
in preventing uncontrolled measles outbreaks.
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