Leveraging multiple data types to estimate the size of the zika epidemic in the Americas

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Abstract

Several hundred thousand Zika cases have been reported across the Americas since 2015. Incidence of infection was likely much higher, however, due to a high frequency of asymp-tomatic infection and other challenges that surveillance systems faced. Using a hierarchical Bayesian model with empirically-informed priors, we leveraged multiple types of Zika case data from 15 countries to estimate subnational reporting probabilities and infection attack rates (IARs). Zika IAR estimates ranged from 0.084 (95% CrI: 0.067–0.096) in Peru to 0.361 (95% CrI: 0.214–0.514) in Ecuador, with significant subnational variability in every country. Totaling infection estimates across these and 33 other countries and territories, our results suggest that 132.3 million (95% CrI: 111.3-170.2 million) people in the Americas had been infected by the end of 2018. These estimates represent the most extensive attempt to deter-mine the size of the Zika epidemic in the Americas, offering a baseline for assessing the risk of future Zika epidemics in this region.

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Moore, S. M., Oidtman, R. J., James Soda, K., Siraj, A. S., Reiner, R. C., Barker, C. M., & Alex Perkins, T. (2020). Leveraging multiple data types to estimate the size of the zika epidemic in the Americas. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 14(9), 1–25. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0008640

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