| Literature DB >> 22713694 |
Ozgur M Araz1, Paul Damien, David A Paltiel, Sean Burke, Bryce van de Geijn, Alison Galvani, Lauren Ancel Meyers.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Around the globe, school closures were used sporadically to mitigate the 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic. However, such closures can detrimentally impact economic and social life.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22713694 PMCID: PMC3495022 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-12-449
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Model parameters
| | | | | | | | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | 2,019,138 | | | | FedStat [29] | |
| | | | 4,655,105 | | | | | |
| | | | 17,612,731 | | | | | |
| | | | 24,326,974 | | | | | |
| | | | 53.58 | | | | FedStat [29] | |
| | | | 135.25 | | | | | |
| | | | 93 | | | | | |
| | | | 20 | | | | Lempel et al. [3] | |
| | | | 14 | | | | | |
| | | | 2.5 (Couples), 5 (Single Parents) | | | | | |
| | | | 3 | | | | [4,26] | |
| | | | 100 | | | | Assumed | |
| | | | | | | | Mossong et al. [30] | |
| | | | | | | |||
| | 7 | | | 1 | | | | |
| | 6 | | | 10 | | | | |
| | | | | | | |||
| | 7 | | | 1 | | | | |
| | 4 | | | 2 | | | | |
| | | | | | Cauchemez et al. [8] | |||
| | | | ||||||
| 0.123 | 0.145 | 0.168 | 0.141 | 0.167 | 0.193 | | ||
| | 0.227 | 0.269 | 0.31 | 0.262 | 0.309 | 0.257 | | |
| 0.178 | 0.201 | 0.234 | 0.205 | 0.231 | 0.269 | | ||
| | 0.33 | 0.372 | 0.434 | 0.38 | 0.427 | 0.499 | | |
| | | | | | | | | |
| | 3 days | | | | | | Gojovic et al. [12] | |
| | 6 days | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | |||
| | 0.159% | | | 0.01% | | | Presanis et al. [31] | |
| 2% | 2% | Chowell et al. [32] |
Figure 1School closure policy pathway for high transmission scenarios. The full tree for the 0.5% school-age prevalence closure trigger is shown. All other closure triggers have the same decision options as the 0.5% trigger, but are not depicted. The policy option in blue (24-week closure triggered by 0.5% school-aged prevalence) is one of the efficient options in the tree under both high transmission scenarios (high and low severity).
Average Cumulative Attack Rates (CAR) for school age population and adults under the low transmission scenarios (standard deviations in parenthesis)
| R0 [1.1-1.5] | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 8 | 12 | 24 | ||
| 0.50% | Students | 39.12 | 35.63 | 32.02 | 28.35 | 14.28 | 6.15 | 2.39 |
| | | (5.8) | (6.9) | (6.3) | (7.3) | (4.9) | (1.9) | (1.7) |
| | Adults | 42.45 | 39.30 | 35.88 | 32.30 | 18.52 | 10.52 | 6.88 |
| | | (4.7) | (5.6) | (5.2) | (6.4) | (4.9) | (2.5) | (2.9) |
| 0.80% | Students | 38.34 | 34.67 | 30.88 | 26.93 | 13.60 | 6.81 | 4.02 |
| | | (6.2) | (6.7) | (7.1) | (6.2) | (4.2) | (1.4) | (1.2) |
| | Adults | 41.88 | 38.57 | 35.01 | 31.31 | 18.56 | 12.15 | 9.07 |
| | | (4.8) | (5.6) | (5.8) | (5.7) | (4.2) | (2.3) | (2.0) |
| 1.10% | Students | 37.74 | 33.46 | 29.38 | 25.30 | 13.38 | 8.46 | 6.66 |
| | | (6.2) | (6.4) | (6.3) | (5.9) | (2.8) | (1.3) | (1.0) |
| | Adults | 41.49 | 37.75 | 34.09 | 30.36 | 19.46 | 15.05 | 13.38 |
| | | (5.1) | (5.3) | (5.5) | (5.2) | (3.2) | (2.8) | (2.2) |
| 1.40% | Students | 37.12 | 32.54 | 28.01 | 24.13 | 14.10 | 10.62 | 9.43 |
| | | (6.2) | (6.0) | (5.9) | (5.4) | (2.0) | (1.9) | (1.8) |
| | Adults | 41.08 | 37.18 | 33.27 | 29.89 | 21.06 | 18.14 | 16.90 |
| | | (5.1) | (4.9) | (5.0) | (4.6) | (2.9) | (3.7) | (3.2) |
| 1.70% | Students | 36.69 | 31.63 | 27.32 | 23.63 | 15.58 | 13.27 | 12.40 |
| | | (5.6) | (5.6) | (5.2) | (4.5) | (1.9) | (2.8) | (1.8) |
| | Adults | 40.82 | 36.70 | 33.09 | 29.96 | 23.26 | 21.45 | 20.80 |
| | | (4.6) | (4.5) | (4.7) | (3.9) | (3.5) | (4.2) | (4.5) |
| 2.00% | Students | 36.35 | 31.17 | 27.10 | 24.03 | 17.97 | 16.53 | 16.50 |
| | | (6.1) | (4.6) | (3.7) | (2.7) | (3.3) | (4.6) | (4.0) |
| | Adults | 40.69 | 36.61 | 33.34 | 30.85 | 26.10 | 25.07 | 25.05 |
| (4.8) | (3.8) | (3.5) | (2.8) | (4.6) | (5.5) | (5.9) | ||
Average Cumulative Attack Rates (CAR) for school age population and adults under the high transmission scenarios (standard deviations in parentheses)
| R0 [1.5-2.1] | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 8 | 12 | 24 | ||
| 0.50% | Students | 73.96 | 73.71 | 73.36 | 73.04 | 71.21 | 65.28 | 10.10 |
| | | (2.7) | (3.3) | (3.3) | (3.5) | (3.7) | (3.1) | (1.4) |
| | Adults | 76.90 | 76.76 | 76.62 | 76.46 | 75.36 | 71.14 | 35.51 |
| | | (2.2) | (2.2) | (2.1) | (1.9) | (2.1) | (3.8) | (6.0) |
| 0.80% | Students | 73.80 | 73.28 | 72.88 | 72.50 | 69.80 | 61.16 | 11.40 |
| | | (3.5) | (3.7) | (3.9) | (3.6) | (4.6) | (8.1) | (1.0) |
| | Adults | 76.78 | 76.62 | 76.44 | 76.24 | 74.67 | 68.71 | 38.14 |
| | | (2.1) | (10) | (2.0) | (2.1) | (2.6) | (4.9) | (3.4) |
| 1.10% | Students | 73.58 | 72.95 | 72.37 | 71.85 | 68.31 | 56.65 | 12.90 |
| | | (3.8) | (3.3) | (3.6) | (3.2) | (4.8) | (7.9) | (1.0) |
| | Adults | 76.74 | 76.47 | 76.21 | 75.94 | 73.88 | 66.16 | 40.34 |
| | | (2.2) | (2.1) | (2.2) | (2.3) | (2.6) | (4.4) | (3.4) |
| 1.40% | Students | 73.32 | 72.51 | 71.90 | 71.13 | 66.54 | 51.80 | 14.55 |
| | | (3.1) | (3.2) | (3.1) | 3.8) | (4.3) | (7.8) | (9.0) |
| | Adults | 76.61 | 76.30 | 75.97 | 75.66 | 73.02 | 63.52 | 42.44 |
| | | (2.0) | (3.2) | (2.1) | (2.2) | (2.2) | (5.3) | (2.2) |
| 1.70% | Students | 73.22 | 72.15 | 71.28 | 70.47 | 64.81 | 47.38 | 15.90 |
| | | (3.5) | (2.0) | (3.5) | (4.2) | (5.8) | (9.5) | (1.0) |
| | Adults | 76.58 | 76.13 | 75.74 | 75.35 | 72.13 | 61.26 | 44.02 |
| | | (2.2) | (3.5) | (3.5) | (2.2) | (3.1) | (5.4) | (4.2) |
| 2.00% | Students | 73.00 | 71.80 | 70.74 | 69.62 | 62.98 | 43.48 | 17.30 |
| | | (3.4) | (2.2) | (2.0) | (3.9) | (5.7) | (9.4) | (1.5) |
| | Adults | 76.52 | 75.96 | 75.51 | 74.99 | 71.22 | 59.25 | 45.15 |
| | | (2.3) | (3.7) | (3.9) | (1.8) | (3.2) | (5.1) | (2.5) |
| 3% | Students | 72.28 | 70.49 | 68.75 | 67.21 | 56.47 | 31.82 | 21.80 |
| | | (3.4) | (1.9) | (2.0) | (3.9) | (7.1) | (4.8) | (2.0) |
| | Adults | 53.33 | 52.80 | 52.24 | 51.73 | 47.59 | 39.04 | 49.40 |
| | | (2.1) | (4.2) | (3.2) | (2.1) | (3.9) | (3.4) | (2.9) |
| 4% | Students | 71.56 | 69.04 | 66.80 | 64.47 | 50.04 | 32.20 | 26.60 |
| | | (3.4) | (3.5) | (2.1) | (4.2) | (7.6) | (2.7) | (2.0) |
| | Adults | 53.12 | 52.39 | 51.70 | 50.91 | 45.47 | 38.92 | 52.95 |
| | | (2.2) | (2.2) | (4.0) | (2.3) | (4.0) | (3.3) | (4.4) |
| 5% | Students | 70.87 | 67.63 | 64.68 | 61.61 | 45.40 | 33.34 | 30.40 |
| | | (3.5) | (3.8) | (2.1) | (4.7) | (5.1) | (1.9) | (3.5) |
| | Adults | 52.94 | 51.97 | 51.04 | 50.03 | 44.13 | 39.98 | 55.90 |
| | | (2.2) | (2.2) | (4.5) | (2.5) | (3.2) | (3.4) | (4.0) |
| 6% | Students | 70.16 | 66.24 | 62.58 | 58.91 | 43.41 | 36.35 | 35.30 |
| | | (3.8) | (3.7) | (4.1) | (5.0) | (3.1) | (3.0) | (4.0) |
| | Adults | 52.74 | 51.57 | 50.43 | 49.21 | 43.86 | 41.45 | 58.99 |
| (2.3) | (2.3) | (2.7) | (3.1) | (3.1) | (3.3) | (4.0) | ||
Figure 2a: Cost and effectiveness comparison of school closure strategies with different closure triggers for low transmission-low CFR scenario. Red circles indicate efficient strategies. b: Cost and effectiveness comparison of school closure strategies with different closure triggers for low transmission-high CFR scenario. Red circles indicate efficient strategies.
Incremental Cost Effectiveness Ratio (ICER) of the effective closure strategies under the low transmission-low severity scenario
| No closure | 6,340 | - | | 0.00 | - |
| 0.5%,12w | 2,090 | 133,612.88 | 44,300 | 2,560,372,219 | 57,700 |
| 0.5%,24w | 1,359 | 156,209.94 | 51,900 | 5,120,744,439 | 334,800 |
Incremental Cost Effectiveness Ratio (ICER) of the effective closure strategies under the low transmission-high severity scenario
| No closure | 115,780 | - | - | 0.00 | - |
| 0.5%,12w | 31,592 | 3,748,812.28 | 566,500 | 2,560,372,219 | 4,500 |
| 0.5%,24w | 19,078 | 4,256,198.65 | 663,600 | 5,120,744,439 | 26,400 |
Figure 3a: Cost and effectiveness comparison of school closure strategies with different closure triggers for high transmission-low CFR scenario. Red circles indicate efficient strategies. b: Cost and effectiveness comparison of school closure strategies with different closure triggers for high transmission-high CFR scenario. Red circles indicate efficient strategies.
Figure 4Total influenza prevalence curves with and without school closures under low transmission (black) and high transmission (blue) scenarios. Dashed lines show a typical epidemic curve under a cost effective closure policy (based on one simulation). Vertical dotted lines indicate beginning and end of each school closure.
Incremental Cost Effectiveness Ratio (ICER) of the effective closure strategies under the high transmission-low severity scenario
| No closure | 15,182 | - | 0.00 | 0.00 | - |
| 1.1%,NM25% | 11,101 | 129,858.17 | 67,900 | 3,810,077,708 | 56,100 |
| 0.5%,NM50% | 8,667 | 204,696.57 | 83,600 | 4,754,976,979 | 60,200 |
| 0.5%,24w | 7,167 | 251,156.96 | 85,200 | 5,120,744,439 | 223,800 |
Incremental Cost Effectiveness Ratio (ICER) of the effective closure strategies under the high transmission-high severity scenario
| No closure | 444,157 | - | 0 | 0.00 | - |
| 3%,NM25% | 255,762 | 6,577,339.87 | 599,300 | 1,798,356,678 | 3,000 |
| 1.1%,NM25% | 256,850 | 6,524,695.19 | 1,239,800 | 3,810,077,708 | 3,100 |
| 0.8%,M25% | 255,517 | 6,587,498.52 | 1,411,800 | 4,419,690,141 | 3,500 |
| 0.5%,NM50% | 250,337 | 6,660,573.77 | 1,497,300 | 4,754,976,979 | 3,900 |
| 0.5%,24w | 249,206 | 6,889,044.94 | 1,529,600 | 5,120,744,439 | 11,300 |
Comparison to published analyses
| Sadique et al. | - | 0.2-1% GDP | 12 weeks | England | 0.2-1.2 Billion Sterlin |
| Lempel et al. | - | 0.1-0.3% GDP | 4 weeks | US | 10-47 Billion $ |
| Smith et al. | 3.3-4.3% GDP | - | 4 weeks | UK | 85.8 -97.6Billion Sterling |
| Brouwers et al. | 2-3% GDP | - | - | Sweden | 2.5 Billion SEK |
| Sander et al. | - | - | 26 weeks | US | 2720 $/person |
| Araz et al. | 0.023-0.5% GDP | 1-24 weeks | Texas | 0.2-5.12 Billion $ |
Figure 5Tornado diagram comparing the relative impact of input variables on the ICER for the preferred closure policy (0.5% SAP trigger, 24-week) under the High transmission-High severity scenario. The width of the bars indicates the uncertainty associated with each parameter as it ranges from 50% of its base value to two times of its base value, as given in Additional file 1.