Epidemics of chikungunya, Zika, and COVID-19 reveal bias in case-based mapping

Author:

Bustos Carrillo Fausto AndresORCID,Mercado Brenda Lopez,Monterrey Jairo Carey,Collado Damaris,Saborio Saira,Miranda Tatiana,Barilla Carlos,Ojeda Sergio,Sanchez Nery,Plazaola Miguel,Laguna Harold Suazo,Elizondo Douglas,Arguello Sonia,Gajewski Anna M.,Maier Hannah E.,Latta Krista,Carlson Bradley,Coloma Josefina,Katzelnick Leah,Sturrock Hugh,Balmaseda Angel,Kuan Guillermina,Gordon AubreeORCID,Harris Eva

Abstract

ABSTRACTAccurate tracing of epidemic spread over space enables effective control measures. We examined three metrics of infection and disease in a pediatric cohort (N ≈ 3,000) over two chikungunya and one Zika epidemic, and in a household cohort (N=1,793) over one COVID-19 epidemic in Managua, Nicaragua. We compared spatial incidence rates (cases/total population), infection risks (infections/total population), and disease risks (cases/infected population). We used generalized additive and mixed-effects models, Kulldorf’s spatial scan statistic, and intracluster correlation coefficients. Across different analyses and all epidemics, incidence rates considerably underestimated infection and disease risks, producing large and spatially non-uniform biases distinct from biases due to incomplete case ascertainment. Infection and disease risks exhibited distinct spatial patterns, and incidence clusters inconsistently identified areas of either risk. While incidence rates are commonly used to infer infection and disease risk in a population, we find that this can induce substantial biases and adversely impact policies to control epidemics.Article summary lineInferring measures of spatial risk from case-only data can substantially bias estimates, thereby weakening and potentially misdirecting measures needed to control an epidemic.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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