Title of article
Network theory and SARS: predicting outbreak diversity
Author/Authors
Meyers، نويسنده , , Lauren Ancel and Pourbohloul، نويسنده , , Babak and Newman، نويسنده , , M.E.J. and Skowronski، نويسنده , , Danuta M. and Brunham، نويسنده , , Robert C.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
11
From page
71
To page
81
Abstract
Many infectious diseases spread through populations via the networks formed by physical contacts among individuals. The patterns of these contacts tend to be highly heterogeneous. Traditional “compartmental” modeling in epidemiology, however, assumes that population groups are fully mixed, that is, every individual has an equal chance of spreading the disease to every other. Applications of compartmental models to Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) resulted in estimates of the fundamental quantity called the basic reproductive number R 0 —the number of new cases of SARS resulting from a single initial case—above one, implying that, without public health intervention, most outbreaks should spark large-scale epidemics. Here we compare these predictions to the early epidemiology of SARS. We apply the methods of contact network epidemiology to illustrate that for a single value of R 0 , any two outbreaks, even in the same setting, may have very different epidemiological outcomes. We offer quantitative insight into the heterogeneity of SARS outbreaks worldwide, and illustrate the utility of this approach for assessing public health strategies.
Keywords
Intervention , contact network , Mathematical model , SARS , Epidemiology
Journal title
Journal of Theoretical Biology
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Journal of Theoretical Biology
Record number
1536764
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