| Literature DB >> 21592339 |
Steven C Le Comber1, D Kim Rossmo, Ali N Hassan, Douglas O Fuller, John C Beier.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Geographic profiling is a statistical tool originally developed in criminology to prioritise large lists of suspects in cases of serial crime. Here, we use two data sets--one historical and one modern--to show how it can be used to locate the sources of infectious disease.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21592339 PMCID: PMC3123167 DOI: 10.1186/1476-072X-10-35
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Health Geogr ISSN: 1476-072X Impact factor: 3.918
Figure 1Cholera and the Broad Street pump. Cholera and the Broad Street Pump. John Snow's classic study of cholera cases in Soho in 1854 (A), and the same data plotted on a modern map of London, with red circles showing 321 individual addresses from Snow's original map and blue squares the locations of 13 neighbourhood water pumps (B). (C) The resulting geoprofile, omitting for clarity the locations of disease cases. (D) The top 1% of the geoprofile, clearly identifying the Broad Street pump.
Figure 2Malaria cases and . Malaria cases and Anopheles sergentii breeding sites in Cairo. Map of Cairo showing locations of 139 recorded Plasmodium vivax malaria cases (red circles) and eight water sources that tested positive for the malaria vectors An. sergentii and/or An. pharoensis (green triangles); 51 other water sources that were negative for anopheline vector species are shown as blue squares. (B) the resulting geoprofile, omitting locations of malaria cases. The seven sites positive for An. sergentii ranked 1-6 and 22 out of 59 in our analysis.
Geographic profiling and other measures of spatial central tendency
| Geographic profiling | Other methods of spatial central tendency | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.20% | 5.10% | 7.40% | 5.20% | |
| 2.80% | 4.50% | 4.00% | 4.40% | |
| 1.30% | 5.87% | 5.35% | 5.85% | |
| 2.18% | 0.42% | 0.11% | 0.38% | |
| 2.53% | 5.17% | 4.68% | 5.14% | |
| 3.06% | 5.22% | 4.72% | 5.19% | |
| 3.06% | 5.16% | 4.67% | 5.13% | |
A comparison of the geographic profiling model's performance against measures of spatial central tendency for (a) the London cholera data and (b) the Cairo malaria data. For each source of infection (the Broad Street pump in the London analysis, and the seven water sources that tested positive for An. sergentii in the Cairo analysis), the table shows the model's hit score percentage in comparison to the spiral search area (SSA) percentage for three measures of spatial central tendency, with the most efficient search marked in red. The SSA is obtained by calculating the percentage of the total area under consideration that has to be searched before locating the correct source, moving out equally in all directions from, respectively, the spatial mean, spatial median and centre of minimum distance; it is thus equivalent to hit score percentage in geographic profiling (see Methods). In the London analysis, GP located the correct source after searching a smaller percentage of the surrounding area (0.2%, compared to 5.1%, 7.4% and 5.2% for the other three methods respectively). In the Cairo analysis, geographic profiling performed better than all three other methods for five out of seven sources, and was almost the best for one of the other two sources (4.46% versus 4.41%). Only for one source, which happened to lie close to the centre of the disease case locations, did the model not perform as well.