| Literature DB >> 29764399 |
Ewan Colman1, Kristen Spies2, Shweta Bansal2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The symptoms of many infectious diseases influence their host to withdraw from social activity limiting their potential to spread. Successful transmission therefore requires the onset of infectiousness to coincide with a time when the host is socially active. Since social activity and infectiousness are both temporal phenomena, we hypothesize that diseases are most pervasive when these two processes are synchronized.Entities:
Keywords: Circadian rhythm; Contact network; Generation time; Latent period; Reachability; Synchronization; Transmission
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29764399 PMCID: PMC5952858 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-018-3117-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Fig. 1Conceptual illustration showing the effect of different latent periods. In the upper panel, the host becomes infectious 12 h after receiving the infection, at which point he has entered a more sedentary phase of his daily schedule. The symptoms of the infection influence him to avoid returning to his school or workplace and no further transmission occurs. In the lower panel, the infectious period begins at the same time of the day that he received the infection. While the symptoms of the disease may result in social withdrawal, there is a period of time for which he is both infectious and socially active, giving the disease an opportunity to spread
Fig. 2Reachability. The top panels show the number of face-to-face interactions between pairs of individuals (in the school data we only show 2 of the 6 weeks). The bottom panel shows the mean reachability of a disease over a range of latent periods. For the purpose of presentation we have subtracted the number of nodes reached directly from the seed (this is the same for all values of the latent period duration). The tendency for latent periods which are larger multiples of 24 h or 7 days to result in lower reachability is explained by the limited time span of the data-sets
Fig. 3The effect of synchronization. The dark line represents the median effect size over individuals in the population. The effect size is defined as the increase in mean outbreak size between a disease for which the latent periods follow a log-Normal distribution with a mode of 11 h, and one which has a mode of 23 h (dispersion factors are equal). Points correspond to the values on the horizontal axis for which the effect size was computed and the gray area is the inter-quartile range. We see that the synchronization effect observed in “Influence of the latent period on disease impact” Section is present for a wide range of parameters values in the disease model
Fig. 4Simulated outbreaks in a synthetic urban environment The proportion of outbreaks that exceed a given size are shown (for each latent period 103 simulations were performed starting from randomly selected seeds at random times during the first day). The three models shown are described in “Effect of household contacts” Section