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New model to predict the spread of
emerging diseases
Reported November 22, 2007
A new model to predict the
spread of emerging diseases has been developed by researchers in the US, Italy,
and France.
The model, described in the online open access journal BMC Medicine, could give
healthcare professionals advance warning of the path an emerging disease might
take and so might improve emergency responses and control.
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) spread rapidly in 2002-2003, revealing
just how vulnerable we might be to emerging diseases and how global
transportation is critical to the spread of an epidemic.
Now, Vittoria Colizza and Alessandro Vespignani of Indiana University,
Bloomington, USA and the Institute for Scientific Interchange Foundation, in
Turin, Italy, and colleagues in France have developed a predictive model of the
spread of emerging diseases based on actual travel and census data for more than
three thousand urban areas in 220 countries. The model provides predictions of
how likely an outbreak will be in each region and how widespread it might
become. The research highlights just how the accuracy in predicting the
spreading pattern of an epidemic can be related to clearly identifiable routes
by which the disease could spread.
In order to assess the predictive power of their model, the researchers
turned to the historical records of the global spread of the SARS virus.
They evaluated the initial conditions before the disease had spread widely,
based on the data for the arrival of the first patient who left mainland
China for Hong Kong, and for the resulting outbreak there. They then
simulated the likelihood that SARS would emerge in specific countries
thereafter, as brought by infectious travelers. The simulated results fit
very accurately with the actual pattern of the spread of SARS in 2002.
Analysis of the results also identified possible paths of the virus' spread
along the routes of commercial air travel, highlighting some preferred
channels which may serve as epidemic pathways for the global spread of the
disease.
"The presented computational approach shows that the integration of
long-range mobility and demographic data provides epidemic models with a
predictive power that can be consistently tested," the researchers explain.
"This computational strategy can be therefore considered as a general tool
in the analysis and forecast of the global spreading of emerging diseases."
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