Analysis of international traveler mobility patterns in Tokyo to identify geographic foci of dengue fever risk

Author:

Yuan Baoyin,Lee Hyojung,Nishiura HiroshiORCID

Abstract

AbstractTravelers play a role in triggering epidemics of imported dengue fever because they can carry the virus to other countries during the incubation period. If a traveler carrying dengue virus visits open green space and is bitten by mosquitoes, a local outbreak can ensue. In the present study, we aimed to understand the movement patterns of international travelers in Tokyo using mobile phone data, with the goal of identifying geographical foci of dengue transmission. We analyzed datasets based on mobile phone access to WiFi systems and measured the spatial distribution of international visitors in Tokyo on two specific dates (one weekday in July 2017 and another weekday in August 2017). Mobile phone users were classified by nationality into three groups according to risk of dengue transmission. Sixteen national parks were selected based on their involvement in a 2014 dengue outbreak and abundance of Aedes mosquitoes. We found that not all national parks were visited by international travelers and that visits to cemeteries were very infrequent. We also found that travelers from countries with high dengue prevalence were less likely to visit national parks compared with travelers from dengue-free countries. Travelers from countries with sporadic dengue cases and countries with regional transmission tended to visit common destinations. By contrast, the travel footprints of visitors from countries with continuous dengue transmission were focused on non-green spaces. Entomological surveillance in Tokyo has been restricted to national parks since the 2014 dengue outbreak. However, our results indicate that areas subject to surveillance should include both public and private green spaces near tourist sites.

Funder

environment research and technology development fund

china scholarship council

ministry of health, labour and welfare

japan agency for medical research and development

japan society for the promotion of science

inamori foundation

gap fund program of kyoto university

core research for evolutional science and technology

strategic international collaborative research program

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Health Informatics,Modelling and Simulation

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