Abstract

BackgroundHand, foot and mouth disease (HFMD) remains an important public health problem in China. Understandings of age-specific transmission for different virus serotypes of the disease and assessment of non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPI) for HFMD are helpful for disease control, but they have been seldom considered. Here we further investigate transmission dynamics of HFMD and quantify the effects of NPIs and vaccination on the disease transmission. MethodsWe extracted information of reported HFMD cases from 2009 to 2015 in East China. Age-specific force of infection (FoI) was used to describe the transmission characteristics for serotypes (EV-A71, CV-A16 and other enterovirus). We used an age-structured Susceptible-Exposed-Infectious-Removed (SEIR) model to simulate how interventions affect HFMD outbreaks. Results4,096,270 HFMD cases were included, and 160619 cases were confirmed for virus serotypes. The peaks of infections always occurred in even-numbered years. CV-A16 and EV-A71 showed a similar trend, children aged 1 or 2 years generally had the highest FoI, but there were no clear patterns for other enterovirus. Simulations showed that school break could dramatically decline the average incidence. When combined with social interventions, it would further reduce the incidence, but the effect is not apparent. When vaccine rate is over or equal to 20%, the incidence would be lower than taking NPIs. ConclusionMore attention should be paid to children under 2 years of age in the prevention and control of HFMD. Compared to NPIs, vaccination is more effective.

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