Human Social Behavior and Demography Drive Patterns of Fine-Scale Dengue Transmission in Endemic Areas of Colombia
Authored by Harish Padmanabha, Fabio Correa, Camilo Rubio, Andres Baeza, Salua Osorio, Jairo Mendez, James Holland Jones, Maria A Diuk-Wasser
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0144451
Sponsors:
WorldBank
Platforms:
C++
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?type=supplementary&id=info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0144451.s002
Abstract
Dengue is known to transmit between humans and A. aegypti mosquitoes
living in neighboring houses. Although transmission is thought to be
highly heterogeneous in both space and time, little is known about the
patterns and drivers of transmission in groups of houses in endemic
settings. We carried out surveys of PCR positivity in children residing
in 2-block patches of highly endemic cities of Colombia. We found high
levels of heterogeneity in PCR positivity, varying from less than 30\%
in 8 of the 10 patches to 56 and 96\%, with the latter patch containing
22 children simultaneously PCR positive (PCR22) for DEN2. We then used
an agent-based model to assess the likely eco-epidemiological context of
this observation. Our model, simulating daily dengue dynamics over a 20
year period in a single two block patch, suggests that the observed
heterogeneity most likely derived from variation in the density of
susceptible people. Two aspects of human adaptive behavior were critical
to determining this density: external social relationships favoring
viral introduction (by susceptible residents or infectious visitors) and
immigration of households from non-endemic areas. External social
relationships generating frequent viral introduction constituted a
particularly strong constraint on susceptible densities, thereby
limiting the potential for explosive outbreaks and dampening the impact
of heightened vectorial capacity. Dengue transmission can be highly
explosive locally, even in neighborhoods with significant immunity in
the human population. Variation among neighborhoods in the density of
local social networks and rural-to-urban migration is likely to produce
significant fine-scale heterogeneity in dengue dynamics, constraining or
amplifying the impacts of changes in mosquito populations and cross
immunity between serotypes.
Tags
Heterogeneity
Dispersal
Populations
Aedes-aegypti
Culicidae
Human movement
Rio-de-janeiro
Virus transmission
Villages
Nicaragua