Publication | Open Access
Epidemiologic Determinants for Modeling Pneumonic Plague Outbreaks
116
Citations
13
References
2004
Year
Pneumonic PlagueInfectious Disease ModelingInfectious Disease ModellingPneumonic Plague OutbreaksEpidemiological DynamicDisease OutbreakComputational EpidemiologyEpidemic IntelligenceGeometric Probability DistributionEpidemiologyMarkov-chain Epidemic Model
Pneumonic plague poses a potentially increasing risk to humans in plague nonendemic regions either as a consequence of an aerosolized release or through importation of the disease. Pneumonic plague is person-to-person transmissible. We provide a quantitative assessment of transmissibility based on past outbreaks that shows that the average number of secondary cases per primary case (R0) was 1.3 (variance = 3.1), assuming a geometric probability distribution, prior to outbreak control measures. We also show that the latent and infectious periods can be approximated by using lognormal distributions with means (SD) of 4.3 (1.8) and 2.5 (1.2) days. Based on this parameter estimation, we construct a Markov-chain epidemic model to demonstrate the potential impact of delays in implementing outbreak control measures and increasing numbers of index cases on the incidence of cases in simulated outbreaks.
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