Spatial dynamics of the 1918 influenza pandemic in England, Wales and the United States
Open Access
- 23 June 2010
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Royal Society in Journal of The Royal Society Interface
- Vol. 8 (55) , 233-243
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2010.0216
Abstract
There is still limited understanding of key determinants of spatial spread of influenza. The 1918 pandemic provides an opportunity to elucidate spatial determinants of spread on a large scale. To better characterize the spread of the 1918 major wave, we fitted a range of city-to-city transmission models to mortality data collected for 246 population centres in England and Wales and 47 cities in the US. Using a gravity model for city-to-city contacts, we explored the effect of population size and distance on the spread of disease and tested assumptions regarding density dependence in connectivity between cities. We employed Bayesian Markov Chain Monte Carlo methods to estimate parameters of the model for population, infectivity, distance and density dependence. We inferred the most likely transmission trees for both countries. For England and Wales, a model that estimated the degree of density dependence in connectivity between cities was preferable by deviance information criterion comparison. Early in the major wave, long distance infective interactions predominated, with local infection events more likely as the epidemic became widespread. For the US, with fewer more widely dispersed cities, statistical power was lacking to estimate population size dependence or the degree of density dependence, with the preferred model depending on distance only. We find that parameters estimated from the England and Wales dataset can be applied to the US data with no likelihood penalty.Keywords
This publication has 38 references indexed in Scilit:
- Predictability and epidemic pathways in global outbreaks of infectious diseases: the SARS case studyBMC Medicine, 2007
- Delaying the International Spread of Pandemic InfluenzaPLoS Medicine, 2006
- Strategies for mitigating an influenza pandemicNature, 2006
- Synchrony, Waves, and Spatial Hierarchies in the Spread of InfluenzaScience, 2006
- Mitigation strategies for pandemic influenza in the United StatesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- The role of the airline transportation network in the prediction and predictability of global epidemicsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Strategies for containing an emerging influenza pandemic in Southeast AsiaNature, 2005
- Forecast and control of epidemics in a globalized worldProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2004
- Transmission Dynamics of the Etiological Agent of SARS in Hong Kong: Impact of Public Health InterventionsScience, 2003
- Simulating the Effect of Quarantine on the Spread of the 1918–19 Flu in Central CanadaBulletin of Mathematical Biology, 2003