Modeling household and community transmission of Ebola virus disease: Epidemic growth, spatial dynamics and insights for epidemic control
Authored by Gerardo Chowell, Maria Kiskowski
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1080/21505594.2015.1076613
Sponsors:
United States National Institutes of Health (NIH)
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The mechanisms behind the sub-exponential growth dynamics of the West
Africa Ebola virus disease epidemic could be related to improved control
of the epidemic and the result of reduced disease transmission in
spatially constrained contact structures. An individual-based, stochastic network model is used to model immediate and delayed epidemic
control in the context of social contact networks and investigate the
extent to which the relative role of these factors may be determined
during an outbreak. We find that in general, epidemics quickly establish
a dynamic equilibrium of infections in the form of a wave of fixed size
and speed traveling through the contact network. Both greater epidemic
control and limited community mixing decrease the size of an infectious
wave. However, for a fixed wave size, epidemic control (in contrast with
limited community mixing) results in lower community saturation and a
wave that moves more quickly through the contact network. We also found
that the level of epidemic control has a disproportionately greater
reductive effect on larger waves, so that a small wave requires nearly
as much epidemic control as a larger wave to end an epidemic.
Tags
networks
outbreak
West-africa
Hemorrhagic-fever
Congo
Evd
Traveling-waves
Liberia
Kikwit