The Effects of Vector Movement and Distribution in a Mathematical Model of Dengue Transmission
Authored by Jr Ira M Longini, M Elizabeth Halloran, Dennis L Chao
Date Published: 2013
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0076044
Sponsors:
United States National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Platforms:
C++
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
https://github.com/tjhladish/dengue/
Abstract
Background: Mathematical models have been used to study the dynamics of
infectious disease outbreaks and predict the effectiveness of potential
mass vaccination campaigns. However, models depend on simplifying
assumptions to be tractable, and the consequences of making such
assumptions need to be studied. Two assumptions usually incorporated by
mathematical models of vector-borne disease transmission is homogeneous
mixing among the hosts and vectors and homogeneous distribution of the
vectors.
Methodology/Principal Findings: We explored the effects of mosquito
movement and distribution in an individual-based model of dengue
transmission in which humans and mosquitoes are explicitly represented
in a spatial environment. We found that the limited flight range of the
vector in the model greatly reduced its ability to transmit dengue among
humans. A model that does not assume a limited flight range could yield
similar attack rates when transmissibility of dengue was reduced by
39\%. A model in which mosquitoes are distributed uniformly across
locations behaves similarly to one in which the number of mosquitoes per
location is drawn from an exponential distribution with a slightly
higher mean number of mosquitoes per location. When the models with
different assumptions were calibrated to have similar human infection
attack rates, mass vaccination had nearly identical effects.
Conclusions/Significance: Small changes in assumptions in a mathematical
model of dengue transmission can greatly change its behavior, but
estimates of the effectiveness of mass dengue vaccination are robust to
some simplifying assumptions typically made in mathematical models of
vector-borne disease.
Tags
space-time analysis
pattern
Dispersal
population
vaccines
Strategies
Aedes-aegypti
Virus transmission
Thai villages
Puerto-rico