Out of the net: An agent-based model to study human movements influence on local-scale malaria transmission
Authored by Francesco Pizzitutti, William Pan, Beth Feingold, Carlos F Mena, Ben Zaitchik, Carlos A Alvarez
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0193493
Sponsors:
United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
Platforms:
MASON
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0193493.s002
Abstract
Though malaria control initiatives have markedly reduced malaria
prevalence in recent decades, global eradication is far from actuality.
Recent studies show that environmental and social heterogeneities in
low-transmission settings have an increased weight in shaping malaria
micro-epidemiology. New integrated and more localized control strategies
should be developed and tested. Here we present a set of agent-based
models designed to study the influence of local scale human movements on
local scale malaria transmission in a typical Amazon environment, where
malaria is transmission is low and strongly connected with seasonal
riverine flooding. The agent-based simulations show that the overall
malaria incidence is essentially not influenced by local scale human
movements. In contrast, the locations of malaria high risk spatial
hotspots heavily depend on human movements because simulated malaria
hotspots are mainly centered on farms, were laborers work during the
day. The agent-based models are then used to test the effectiveness of
two different malaria control strategies both designed to reduce local
scale malaria incidence by targeting hotspots. The first control
scenario consists in treat against mosquito bites people that, during
the simulation, enter at least once inside hotspots revealed considering
the actual sites where human individuals were infected. The second
scenario involves the treatment of people entering in hotspots
calculated assuming that the infection sites of every infected
individual is located in the household where the individual lives.
Simulations show that both considered scenarios perform better in
controlling malaria than a randomized treatment, although targeting
household hotspots shows slightly better performance.
Tags
Epidemiology
behavior
Infection
Elimination
population
Infections
Strategies
Peruvian amazon
Plasmodium-falciparum
Seasonal distribution
Mosquitos
Anopheles-darlingi
Vector-control
Plasmodium-vivax