scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Estimating the impact of school closure on influenza transmission from Sentinel data

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
It is shown that holidays lead to a 20–29% reduction in the rate at which influenza is transmitted to children, but that they have no detectable effect on the contact patterns of adults, as well as predicting the effect of school closure during a pandemic.
Abstract
The threat posed by the highly pathogenic H5N1 influenza virus requires public health authorities to prepare for a human pandemic. Although pre-pandemic vaccines and antiviral drugs might significantly reduce illness rates, their stockpiling is too expensive to be practical for many countries. Consequently, alternative control strategies, based on non-pharmaceutical interventions, are a potentially attractive policy option. School closure is the measure most often considered. The high social and economic costs of closing schools for months make it an expensive and therefore controversial policy, and the current absence of quantitative data on the role of schools during influenza epidemics means there is little consensus on the probable effectiveness of school closure in reducing the impact of a pandemic. Here, from the joint analysis of surveillance data and holiday timing in France, we quantify the role of schools in influenza epidemics and predict the effect of school closure during a pandemic. We show that holidays lead to a 20-29% reduction in the rate at which influenza is transmitted to children, but that they have no detectable effect on the contact patterns of adults. Holidays prevent 16-18% of seasonal influenza cases (18-21% in children). By extrapolation, we find that prolonged school closure during a pandemic might reduce the cumulative number of cases by 13-17% (18-23% in children) and peak attack rates by up to 39-45% (47-52% in children). The impact of school closure would be reduced if it proved difficult to maintain low contact rates among children for a prolonged period.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Factors associated with social contacts in four communities during the 2007-2008 influenza season.

TL;DR: The number of social contacts varied with age, was lower on weekends than on weekdays, and further decreased during school holiday periods, and adults with influenza-like illnesses had fewer social contacts.
Posted ContentDOI

The impact of unplanned school closure on children's social contact: Rapid evidence review

TL;DR: Evidence suggests that many children continue to leave the house and mix with others during school closures despite public health recommendations to avoid social contact, which could be used to improve infectious disease modelling.
Journal ArticleDOI

Linking Influenza Virus Tissue Tropism to Population-Level Reproductive Fitness

TL;DR: The results indicate that spatial heterogeneities in virus clearance, virus pathogenicity or both, resulting from the unique structure of the respiratory tract, may drive optimal receptor binding affinity–that maximizes influenza virus reproductive fitness at the population level–towards sialic acids with α2,6 linkage to galactose.
Journal ArticleDOI

The use of mathematical models to inform influenza pandemic preparedness and response

TL;DR: In the early stages of the 2009 pandemic, mathematical models were used to track the spread of the virus, predict the time course of the pandemic and assess the likely impact of large-scale vaccination as mentioned in this paper.
References
More filters
BookDOI

Markov Chain Monte Carlo in Practice

TL;DR: The Markov Chain Monte Carlo Implementation Results Summary and Discussion MEDICAL MONITORING Introduction Modelling Medical Monitoring Computing Posterior Distributions Forecasting Model Criticism Illustrative Application Discussion MCMC for NONLINEAR HIERARCHICAL MODELS.
BookDOI

Sequential Monte Carlo methods in practice

TL;DR: This book presents the first comprehensive treatment of Monte Carlo techniques, including convergence results and applications to tracking, guidance, automated target recognition, aircraft navigation, robot navigation, econometrics, financial modeling, neural networks, optimal control, optimal filtering, communications, reinforcement learning, signal enhancement, model averaging and selection.
Book

Monte Carlo strategies in scientific computing

Jun Liu
TL;DR: This book provides a self-contained and up-to-date treatment of the Monte Carlo method and develops a common framework under which various Monte Carlo techniques can be "standardized" and compared.
Journal ArticleDOI

Strategies for mitigating an influenza pandemic

TL;DR: It is found that border restrictions and/or internal travel restrictions are unlikely to delay spread by more than 2–3 weeks unless more than 99% effective, and vaccine stockpiled in advance of a pandemic could significantly reduce attack rates even if of low efficacy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Monte Carlo Strategies in Scientific Computing

Tim Hesterberg
- 01 Nov 2002 - 
TL;DR: The strength of this book is in bringing together advanced Monte Carlo methods developed in many disciplines, including the Ising model, molecular structure simulation, bioinformatics, target tracking, hypothesis testing for astronomical observations, Bayesian inference of multilevel models, missing-data problems.
Related Papers (5)