Journal article
The distribution of the time taken for an epidemic to spread between two communities
AWC Yan, AJ Black, JM McCaw, N Rebuli, JV Ross, AJ Swan, RI Hickson
Mathematical Biosciences | ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC | Published : 2018
Abstract
Assessing the risk of disease spread between communities is important in our highly connected modern world. However, the impact of disease- and population-specific factors on the time taken for an epidemic to spread between communities, as well as the impact of stochastic disease dynamics on this spreading time, are not well understood. In this study, we model the spread of an acute infection between two communities (‘patches’) using a susceptible-infectious-removed (SIR) metapopulation model. We develop approximations to efficiently evaluate the probability of a major outbreak in a second patch given disease introduction in a source patch, and the distribution of the time taken for this to ..
View full abstractGrants
Awarded by American College of Surgeons Foundation
Funding Acknowledgements
A. W. C. Y. was supported by an ACS Foundation Scholarship and an Australian Postgraduate Award (now Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship). A. J. B. was supported by an Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (DE160100690). J. V. R. is supported by an Australian Research Council Future Fellowship (FT130100254). A. W. C. Y., J. M. M. and J. V. R. are supported by the National Health and Medical Research Centre of Australia Centre for Research Excellence Policy Relevant Infectious disease Simulation and Mathematical Modelling (PRISM<SUP>2</SUP>; 1078068).