| Literature DB >> 27983501 |
Robin E Russell, Rachel A Katz, Katherine L D Richgels, Daniel P Walsh, Evan H C Grant.
Abstract
The rapid emergence and reemergence of zoonotic diseases requires the ability to rapidly evaluate and implement optimal management decisions. Actions to control or mitigate the effects of emerging pathogens are commonly delayed because of uncertainty in the estimates and the predicted outcomes of the control tactics. The development of models that describe the best-known information regarding the disease system at the early stages of disease emergence is an essential step for optimal decision-making. Models can predict the potential effects of the pathogen, provide guidance for assessing the likelihood of success of different proposed management actions, quantify the uncertainty surrounding the choice of the optimal decision, and highlight critical areas for immediate research. We demonstrate how to develop models that can be used as a part of a decision-making framework to determine the likelihood of success of different management actions given current knowledge.Entities:
Keywords: decision analysis; emerging diseases; infectious diseases; mathematical modelling; model development; one health; predictive modelling; zoonoses; zoonotic diseases
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27983501 PMCID: PMC5176225 DOI: 10.3201/eid2301.161452
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
FigurePredictive 4-5-3 modeling framework for emergency disease management.
Key information needs for management of emerging diseases of wildlife
| Pathogen characteristics | Description |
|---|---|
| Pathogenicity | What is the severity, lethality, and rapidity (rate of mortality) of effects on hosts? |
| Environmental niche | What environmental conditions (temperature, humidity) restrict persistence? |
| Taxonomic breadth of host | Is there evidence that the agent type can affect hosts across multiple taxa? Which taxa? |
| Host characteristics | |
| Contact networks | Spatial structure: What is the spatial structure of host populations: panmictic, metapopulations, or isolated? Does this vary across the landscape? |
| Movement patterns: What is the average and maximum distance an infected host might travel? | |
| Social behavior: What is the social behavior of individual members in the host populations? What is the rate of contact between species? | |
| Transmission pathways | How is the pathogen transmitted between hosts? How many different transmission pathways are there? |