Monitoring the Path to the Elimination of Infectious Diseases

During the endgame of elimination programs, parasite populations may exhibit dynamical phenomena not typical of endemic disease. Particularly, monitoring programs for tracking infection prevalence may be hampered by overall rarity, the sporadic and unpredictable timing and location of outbreaks, and...

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Main Authors: John M. Drake, Simon I. Hay
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2017-06-01
Series:Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2414-6366/2/3/20
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spelling doaj-870eb0f509814a66b40610d25b6d89d42020-11-24T22:26:23ZengMDPI AGTropical Medicine and Infectious Disease2414-63662017-06-01232010.3390/tropicalmed2030020tropicalmed2030020Monitoring the Path to the Elimination of Infectious DiseasesJohn M. Drake0Simon I. Hay1Odum School of Ecology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602-2202, USAInstitute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98121, USADuring the endgame of elimination programs, parasite populations may exhibit dynamical phenomena not typical of endemic disease. Particularly, monitoring programs for tracking infection prevalence may be hampered by overall rarity, the sporadic and unpredictable timing and location of outbreaks, and under-reporting. A particularly important problem for monitoring is determining the distance that must be covered to achieve the elimination threshold at an effective reproduction number less than one. In this perspective, we suggest that this problem may be overcome by measuring critical slowing down. Critical slowing down is a phenomenon exhibited by nonlinear dynamical systems in the vicinity of a critical threshold. In infectious disease dynamics, critical slowing down is expressed as an increase in the coefficient of variation and other properties of the fluctuations in the number of cases. In simulations, we show the coefficient of variation to be insensitive to under-reporting error and therefore a robust measurement of the approach to elimination. Additionally, we show that there is an inevitable delay between the time at which the effective reproduction number is reduced to below one and complete elimination is achieved. We urge that monitoring programs include dynamical properties such as critical slowing down in their metrics for measuring achievement and avoid withdrawing control activities prematurely.http://www.mdpi.com/2414-6366/2/3/20bifurcation delaycritical slowing downeliminationendgamesmallpox
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John M. Drake
Simon I. Hay
spellingShingle John M. Drake
Simon I. Hay
Monitoring the Path to the Elimination of Infectious Diseases
Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease
bifurcation delay
critical slowing down
elimination
endgame
smallpox
author_facet John M. Drake
Simon I. Hay
author_sort John M. Drake
title Monitoring the Path to the Elimination of Infectious Diseases
title_short Monitoring the Path to the Elimination of Infectious Diseases
title_full Monitoring the Path to the Elimination of Infectious Diseases
title_fullStr Monitoring the Path to the Elimination of Infectious Diseases
title_full_unstemmed Monitoring the Path to the Elimination of Infectious Diseases
title_sort monitoring the path to the elimination of infectious diseases
publisher MDPI AG
series Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease
issn 2414-6366
publishDate 2017-06-01
description During the endgame of elimination programs, parasite populations may exhibit dynamical phenomena not typical of endemic disease. Particularly, monitoring programs for tracking infection prevalence may be hampered by overall rarity, the sporadic and unpredictable timing and location of outbreaks, and under-reporting. A particularly important problem for monitoring is determining the distance that must be covered to achieve the elimination threshold at an effective reproduction number less than one. In this perspective, we suggest that this problem may be overcome by measuring critical slowing down. Critical slowing down is a phenomenon exhibited by nonlinear dynamical systems in the vicinity of a critical threshold. In infectious disease dynamics, critical slowing down is expressed as an increase in the coefficient of variation and other properties of the fluctuations in the number of cases. In simulations, we show the coefficient of variation to be insensitive to under-reporting error and therefore a robust measurement of the approach to elimination. Additionally, we show that there is an inevitable delay between the time at which the effective reproduction number is reduced to below one and complete elimination is achieved. We urge that monitoring programs include dynamical properties such as critical slowing down in their metrics for measuring achievement and avoid withdrawing control activities prematurely.
topic bifurcation delay
critical slowing down
elimination
endgame
smallpox
url http://www.mdpi.com/2414-6366/2/3/20
work_keys_str_mv AT johnmdrake monitoringthepathtotheeliminationofinfectiousdiseases
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