Literature DB >> 25685614

A three-scale network model for the early growth dynamics of 2014 west Africa ebola epidemic.

Maria A Kiskowski1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In mid-October 2014, the number of cases of the West Africa Ebola virus epidemic in Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia exceeded 9,000 cases. The early growth dynamics of the epidemic has been qualitatively different for each of the three countries. However, it is important to understand these disparate dynamics as trends of a single epidemic spread over regions with similar geographic and cultural aspects, with likely common parameters for transmission rates and reproduction number R0.
METHODS: We combine a discrete, stochastic SEIR model with a three-scale community network model to demonstrate that the different regional trends may be explained by different community mixing rates. Heuristically, the effect of different community mixing rates may be understood as the observation that two individuals infected by the same chain of transmission are more likely to share the same contacts in a less-mixed community. Local saturation effects occur as the contacts of an infected individual are more likely to already be exposed by the same chain of transmission.
RESULTS: The effects of community mixing, together with stochastic effects, can explain the qualitative difference in the growth of Ebola virus cases in each country, and why the probability of large outbreaks may have recently increased. An increase in the rate of Ebola cases in Guinea in late August, and a local fitting of the transient dynamics of the Ebola cases in Liberia, suggests that the epidemic in Liberia has been more severe, and the epidemic in Guinea is worsening, due to discrete seeding events as the epidemic spreads into new communities.
CONCLUSIONS: A relatively simple network model provides insight on the role of local effects such as saturation that would be difficult to otherwise quantify. Our results predict that exponential growth of an epidemic is driven by the exposure of new communities, underscoring the importance of limiting this spread.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Ebola virus; Guinea; disease model; disease outbreak; ebola; networks

Year:  2014        PMID: 25685614      PMCID: PMC4318875          DOI: 10.1371/currents.outbreaks.c6efe8274dc55274f05cbcb62bbe6070

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS Curr        ISSN: 2157-3999


  26 in total

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6.  Modeling the impact of interventions on an epidemic of ebola in sierra leone and liberia.

Authors:  Caitlin M Rivers; Eric T Lofgren; Madhav Marathe; Stephen Eubank; Bryan L Lewis
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7.  Rapid diagnosis of Ebola hemorrhagic fever by reverse transcription-PCR in an outbreak setting and assessment of patient viral load as a predictor of outcome.

Authors:  Jonathan S Towner; Pierre E Rollin; Daniel G Bausch; Anthony Sanchez; Sharon M Crary; Martin Vincent; William F Lee; Christina F Spiropoulou; Thomas G Ksiazek; Mathew Lukwiya; Felix Kaducu; Robert Downing; Stuart T Nichol
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8.  Reproduction numbers for epidemic models with households and other social structures. I. Definition and calculation of R0.

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10.  Outbreak of ebola virus disease in Guinea: where ecology meets economy.

Authors:  Daniel G Bausch; Lara Schwarz
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2014-07-31
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  21 in total

1.  Characterizing the reproduction number of epidemics with early subexponential growth dynamics.

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2.  Modeling the 2014 Ebola Virus Epidemic - Agent-Based Simulations, Temporal Analysis and Future Predictions for Liberia and Sierra Leone.

Authors:  Constantinos Siettos; Cleo Anastassopoulou; Lucia Russo; Christos Grigoras; Eleftherios Mylonakis
Journal:  PLoS Curr       Date:  2015-03-09

3.  New methodologies for the estimation of population vulnerability to diseases: a case study of Lassa fever and Ebola in Nigeria and Sierra Leone.

Authors:  Olumayowa Kajero; Victor Del Rio Vilas; James L N Wood; Giovanni Lo Iacono
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4.  Beyond Contact Tracing: Community-Based Early Detection for Ebola Response.

Authors:  Vincent Wong; Daniel Cooney; Yaneer Bar-Yam
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5.  The Western Africa ebola virus disease epidemic exhibits both global exponential and local polynomial growth rates.

Authors:  Gerardo Chowell; Cécile Viboud; James M Hyman; Lone Simonsen
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6.  Modeling spatial invasion of Ebola in West Africa.

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7.  Strategies for Disease Containment: A Biological-Behavioral-Intervention Computational Informatics Framework.

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8.  Adequacy of SEIR models when epidemics have spatial structure: Ebola in Sierra Leone.

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Review 9.  Mathematical models to characterize early epidemic growth: A review.

Authors:  Gerardo Chowell; Lisa Sattenspiel; Shweta Bansal; Cécile Viboud
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Review 10.  A systematic review of early modelling studies of Ebola virus disease in West Africa.

Authors:  Z S Y Wong; C M Bui; A A Chughtai; C R Macintyre
Journal:  Epidemiol Infect       Date:  2017-02-07       Impact factor: 4.434

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