Abstract

As of 12 May 2009, 5,251 cases of the new influenza A(H1N1) have been officially reported to the World Health Organization (WHO) from 30 countries, with most of the identified cases exported from Mexico where a local epidemic has been going on for the last two months. Sustained human-to-human transmission is necessary to trigger influenza pandemic and estimating the reproduction ratio (average number of secondary cases per primary case) is necessary for forecasting the spread of infection. We use two methods to estimate the reproduction ratio from the epidemic curve in Mexico using three plausible generation intervals (the time between primary and secondary case infection). As expected, the reproduction ratio estimates were highly sensitive to assumptions regarding the generation interval, which remains to be estimated for the current epidemic. Here, we suggest that the reproduction ratio was less than 2.2 - 3.1 in Mexico, depending on the generation interval. Monitoring and updating the reproduction ratio estimate as the epidemic spreads outside Mexico into different settings should remain a priority for assessing the situation and helping to plan public health interventions.

Highlights

  • As of 12 May 2009, 5,251 cases of the new influenza A(H1N1) have been officially reported to the World Health Organization (WHO) from 30 countries [1,2]

  • When using M1, the period starting on 9 April and ending on 24 April yielded the best fit for exponential growth, with daily rate r = 0.30 [CI95% 0.28-0.34] (Figure 1)

  • The magnitude of R depended on the generation interval: the maximum value was 2.1 (18 April) for the PAN GI; 4.0 (11 April) for the VIR GI; and 3.2 (17 April) for the ELV GI

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Summary

Introduction

As of 12 May 2009, 5,251 cases of the new influenza A(H1N1) have been officially reported to the World Health Organization (WHO) from 30 countries [1,2]. Two parameters must be estimated for this new virus using mathematical and computational models: the reproduction ratio (R), which measures the average number of secondary cases per primary case; and the generation interval, which measures the average time between infection in a primary case and its secondary cases. The larger the reproduction ratio, the higher the required efficacy of public health interventions [3]. We use two different methods to provide preliminary estimates of R for the outbreak in Mexico

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