Containing Ebola at the Source with Ring Vaccination
Authored by Marco Ajelli, Stefano Merler, Alessandro Vespignani, Laura Fumanelli, Stefano Parlamento, Ana Pastore Y Piontti, Natalie E Dean, Giovanni Putoto, Dante Carraro, Jr Ira M Longini, M Elizabeth Halloran
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0005093
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Abstract
Interim results from the Guinea Ebola ring vaccination trial suggest
high efficacy of the rVSV-ZEBOV vaccine. These findings open the door to
the use of ring vaccination strategies in which the contacts and
contacts of contacts of each index case are promptly vaccinated to
contain future Ebola virus disease outbreaks. To provide a numerical
estimate of the effectiveness of ring vaccination strategies we
introduce a spatially explicit agent-based model to simulate Ebola
outbreaks in the Pujehun district, Sierra Leone, structurally similar to
previous modelling approaches. We find that ring vaccination can
successfully contain an outbreak for values of the effective
reproduction number up to 1.6. Through an extensive sensitivity analysis
of parameters characterising the readiness and capacity of the health
care system, we identify interventions that, alongside ring vaccination, could increase the likelihood of containment. In particular, shortening
the time from symptoms onset to hospitalisation to 2-3 days on average
through improved contact tracing procedures, adding a 2km spatial
component to the vaccination ring, and decreasing human mobility by
quarantining affected areas might contribute increase our ability to
contain outbreaks with effective reproduction number up to 2.6. These
results have implications for future control of Ebola and other emerging
infectious disease threats.
Tags
smallpox
outbreak
Interventions
Virus disease