The importance of thinking beyond the water-supply in cholera epidemics: A historical urban case-study.

BACKGROUND:Planning interventions to respond to cholera epidemics requires an understanding of the major transmission routes. Interrupting short-cycle (household, foodborne) transmission may require different approaches as compared long-cycle (environmentally-mediated/waterborne) transmission. Howev...

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Main Authors: Matthew D Phelps, Andrew S Azman, Joseph A Lewnard, Marina Antillón, Lone Simonsen, Viggo Andreasen, Peter K M Jensen, Virginia E Pitzer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-11-01
Series:PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5720805?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-9cb76eba3d87428caedc2ce516245f7b2020-11-25T01:35:47ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases1935-27271935-27352017-11-011111e000610310.1371/journal.pntd.0006103The importance of thinking beyond the water-supply in cholera epidemics: A historical urban case-study.Matthew D PhelpsAndrew S AzmanJoseph A LewnardMarina AntillónLone SimonsenViggo AndreasenPeter K M JensenVirginia E PitzerBACKGROUND:Planning interventions to respond to cholera epidemics requires an understanding of the major transmission routes. Interrupting short-cycle (household, foodborne) transmission may require different approaches as compared long-cycle (environmentally-mediated/waterborne) transmission. However, differentiating the relative contribution of short- and long-cycle routes has remained difficult, and most cholera outbreak control efforts focus on interrupting long-cycle transmission. Here we use high-resolution epidemiological and municipal infrastructure data from a cholera outbreak in 1853 Copenhagen to explore the relative contribution of short- and long-cycle transmission routes during a major urban epidemic. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS:We fit a spatially explicit time-series meta-population model to 6,552 physician-reported cholera cases from Copenhagen in 1853. We estimated the contribution of long-cycle waterborne transmission between neighborhoods using historical municipal water infrastructure data, fitting the force of infection from hydraulic flow, then comparing model performance. We found the epidemic was characterized by considerable transmission heterogeneity. Some neighborhoods acted as localized transmission hotspots, while other neighborhoods were less affected or important in driving the epidemic. We found little evidence to support long-cycle transmission between hydrologically-connected neighborhoods. Collectively, these findings suggest short-cycle transmission was significant. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE:Spatially targeted cholera interventions, such as reactive vaccination or sanitation/hygiene campaigns in hotspot neighborhoods, would likely have been more effective in this epidemic than control measures aimed at interrupting long-cycle transmission, such as improving municipal water quality. We recommend public health planners consider programs aimed at interrupting short-cycle transmission as essential tools in the cholera control arsenal.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5720805?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Matthew D Phelps
Andrew S Azman
Joseph A Lewnard
Marina Antillón
Lone Simonsen
Viggo Andreasen
Peter K M Jensen
Virginia E Pitzer
spellingShingle Matthew D Phelps
Andrew S Azman
Joseph A Lewnard
Marina Antillón
Lone Simonsen
Viggo Andreasen
Peter K M Jensen
Virginia E Pitzer
The importance of thinking beyond the water-supply in cholera epidemics: A historical urban case-study.
PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases
author_facet Matthew D Phelps
Andrew S Azman
Joseph A Lewnard
Marina Antillón
Lone Simonsen
Viggo Andreasen
Peter K M Jensen
Virginia E Pitzer
author_sort Matthew D Phelps
title The importance of thinking beyond the water-supply in cholera epidemics: A historical urban case-study.
title_short The importance of thinking beyond the water-supply in cholera epidemics: A historical urban case-study.
title_full The importance of thinking beyond the water-supply in cholera epidemics: A historical urban case-study.
title_fullStr The importance of thinking beyond the water-supply in cholera epidemics: A historical urban case-study.
title_full_unstemmed The importance of thinking beyond the water-supply in cholera epidemics: A historical urban case-study.
title_sort importance of thinking beyond the water-supply in cholera epidemics: a historical urban case-study.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases
issn 1935-2727
1935-2735
publishDate 2017-11-01
description BACKGROUND:Planning interventions to respond to cholera epidemics requires an understanding of the major transmission routes. Interrupting short-cycle (household, foodborne) transmission may require different approaches as compared long-cycle (environmentally-mediated/waterborne) transmission. However, differentiating the relative contribution of short- and long-cycle routes has remained difficult, and most cholera outbreak control efforts focus on interrupting long-cycle transmission. Here we use high-resolution epidemiological and municipal infrastructure data from a cholera outbreak in 1853 Copenhagen to explore the relative contribution of short- and long-cycle transmission routes during a major urban epidemic. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS:We fit a spatially explicit time-series meta-population model to 6,552 physician-reported cholera cases from Copenhagen in 1853. We estimated the contribution of long-cycle waterborne transmission between neighborhoods using historical municipal water infrastructure data, fitting the force of infection from hydraulic flow, then comparing model performance. We found the epidemic was characterized by considerable transmission heterogeneity. Some neighborhoods acted as localized transmission hotspots, while other neighborhoods were less affected or important in driving the epidemic. We found little evidence to support long-cycle transmission between hydrologically-connected neighborhoods. Collectively, these findings suggest short-cycle transmission was significant. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE:Spatially targeted cholera interventions, such as reactive vaccination or sanitation/hygiene campaigns in hotspot neighborhoods, would likely have been more effective in this epidemic than control measures aimed at interrupting long-cycle transmission, such as improving municipal water quality. We recommend public health planners consider programs aimed at interrupting short-cycle transmission as essential tools in the cholera control arsenal.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5720805?pdf=render
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