Mobile phone data highlights the role of mass gatherings in the spreading of cholera outbreaks

被引:107
作者
Finger, Flavio [1 ]
Genolet, Tina [1 ]
Mari, Lorenzo [2 ]
de Magny, Guillaume Constantin [3 ]
Manga, Noel Magloire [4 ]
Rinaldo, Andrea [1 ,5 ]
Bertuzzo, Enrico [1 ]
机构
[1] Ecole Polytech Fed Lausanne, Lab Ecohydrol, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland
[2] Politecn Milan, Dipartimento Elettron Informaz & Bioingn, I-20133 Milan, Italy
[3] Inst Dev Res, Malad Infect & Vecteurs Ecol Genet Evolut & Contr, F-64501 Montpellier, France
[4] Univ Assane Seck Ziguinchor, Hop Paix, Serv Malad Infect & Trop, Unite Format & Rech Sci Sante, Ziguinchor 27000, Senegal
[5] Univ Padua, Dipartimento Ingn Civile Edile & Ambientale, I-35131 Padua, Italy
基金
瑞士国家科学基金会;
关键词
mobile phone call data; cholera epidemics; spatially explicit epidemiological models; waterborne disease; INFECTIOUS-DISEASES; SPATIAL SPREAD; TRANSMISSION; HAITI; PREDICTABILITY; EPIDEMIC; MODEL; DYNAMICS; BEHAVIOR;
D O I
10.1073/pnas.1522305113
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
The spatiotemporal evolution of human mobility and the related fluctuations of population density are known to be key drivers of the dynamics of infectious disease outbreaks. These factors are particularly relevant in the case of mass gatherings, which may act as hotspots of disease transmission and spread. Understanding these dynamics, however, is usually limited by the lack of accurate data, especially in developing countries. Mobile phone call data provide a new, first-order source of information that allows the tracking of the evolution of mobility fluxes with high resolution in space and time. Here, we analyze a dataset of mobile phone records of similar to 150,000 users in Senegal to extract human mobility fluxes and directly incorporate them into a spatially explicit, dynamic epidemiological framework. Our model, which also takes into account other drivers of disease transmission such as rainfall, is applied to the 2005 cholera outbreak in Senegal, which totaled more than 30,000 reported cases. Our findings highlight the major influence that a mass gathering, which took place during the initial phase of the outbreak, had on the course of the epidemic. Such an effect could not be explained by classic, static approaches describing human mobility. Model results also show how concentrated efforts toward disease control in a transmission hotspot could have an important effect on the large-scale progression of an outbreak.
引用
收藏
页码:6421 / 6426
页数:6
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