Evaluating public health responses to reintroduced smallpox via dynamic, socially structured, and spatially distributed metapopulation models

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Abstract

The risk of smallpox reintroduction has motivated preparations in potential target countries. After reproducing the spatiotemporal pattern after the 1972 importation into Yugoslavia via coupled, biologically realistic systems of ordinary differential equations, we developed dynamic population models with current US age distributions and typical spatially distributed social structures. Surveillance and containment (S&C) coupled with vaccination of 95% of hospital-based health care workers (HCWs) within 2 days after the first diagnosis (estimated to be 18 days after aerosol release) were modeled after simulated exposure of 10, 50, or 10,000 people in various settings. If 90% of patients were isolated within days after symptom onset and 75% of contacts were vaccinated and monitored, S&C would reduce cases by 82%-99%. Preemptive immunization of HCWs, closing of schools, and even vaccination of as many as 80% within 1 week would have small marginal benefits. Preparations should emphasize stockpiling vaccine, training HCWs, improving laboratory capacity, and fostering an understanding of S&C. © 2008 by the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Glasser, J. W., Foster, S. O., Millar, J. D., & Lane, J. M. (2008). Evaluating public health responses to reintroduced smallpox via dynamic, socially structured, and spatially distributed metapopulation models. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 46(SUPPL. 3). https://doi.org/10.1086/524382

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