Author:
WOOLHOUSE M. E. J.,ETARD J.-F.,DIETZ K.,NDHLOVU P. D.,CHANDIWANA S. K.
Abstract
We review the theoretical framework for exploring the impact of
individual and spatial heterogeneities in patterns of
exposure and contamination and on the basic reproduction number, R0,
for human schistosomes. Analysis of water contact
data for 5 communities in Zimbabwe and Mali suggests that the impact is
substantial, increasing R0 by factors of up to
6·5, mostly due to highly overdispersed distributions of contact
rates among individuals. Several practical conclusions
emerge: concentration of contacts at a single site should be avoided; the
impact of control targeted at certain sites cannot
be predicted without knowledge of how individuals' contacts are distributed
among sites; control programmes targeted
at individuals or sites contributing most to transmission can be very efficient
but, conversely, will be ineffective if any of
these individuals or sites are missed.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Animal Science and Zoology,Parasitology
Cited by
60 articles.
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