Literature DB >> 27105983

Seasonality and the effectiveness of mass vaccination.

Dennis L Chao1, Dobromir T Dimitrov.   

Abstract

Many infectious diseases have seasonal outbreaks, which may be driven by cyclical environmental conditions (e.g., an annual rainy season) or human behavior (e.g., school calendars or seasonal migration). If a pathogen is only transmissible for a limited period of time each year, then seasonal outbreaks could infect fewer individuals than expected given the pathogen's in-season transmissibility. Influenza, with its short serial interval and long season, probably spreads throughout a population until a substantial fraction of susceptible individuals are infected. Dengue, with a long serial interval and shorter season, may be constrained by its short transmission season rather than the depletion of susceptibles. Using mathematical modeling, we show that mass vaccination is most efficient, in terms of infections prevented per vaccine administered, at high levels of coverage for pathogens that have relatively long epidemic seasons, like influenza, and at low levels of coverage for pathogens with short epidemic seasons, like dengue. Therefore, the length of a pathogen's epidemic season may need to be considered when evaluating the costs and benefits of vaccination programs.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27105983      PMCID: PMC4843823          DOI: 10.3934/mbe.2015001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Math Biosci Eng        ISSN: 1547-1063            Impact factor:   2.080


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6.  Seasonality and period-doubling bifurcations in an epidemic model.

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7.  Herd immunity and measles.

Authors:  J P Fox
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8.  Seasonal infectious disease epidemiology.

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