Evaluation of containment and mitigation strategies for an influenza A pandemic in China
Authored by Wenguo Weng, Shunjiang Ni
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1177/0037549715581637
Sponsors:
Chinese National Natural Science Foundation
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The world is still in heightened awareness of the potential threat of
another influenza pandemic, although it has been 5 years since the 2009
influenza A (H1N1) pandemic. Evaluation of the adopted intervention
strategies for handling the 2009 H1N1 pandemic is helpful for dealing
with future outbreaks. In this paper we developed a hybrid model
combining meta-population and agent-based models to evaluate the
containment and mitigation strategies (e.g., contact tracing and
quarantine of contacts at assembly sites in the early phase, more
medical institutions to detect cases and treat serious patients in the
developing phase, and rapid vaccines delivered to students first) for an
H1N1 pandemic that were adopted in China. We find that the presented
model can retrospectively fit relatively well to the spreading progress
through comparison of the simulation results with actual infections
data, and it can be used for practical application in evaluating the
containment and mitigation strategies for an influenza pandemic if model
validation and parameter estimation can be conducted by using actual
data. The results will contribute to understanding the spread of viruses
and the control of infectious diseases, and to helping government
officials create policies on handling an influenza pandemic, especially
beneficial to a large and diverse country such as the People's Republic
of China.
Tags
human mobility
transmission
H1N1
Travel
Closure