Abstract

BackgroundThe propagation of communicable diseases through a population is an inherent spatial and temporal process of great importance for modern society. For this reason a spatially explicit epidemiologic model of infectious disease is proposed for a greater understanding of the disease's spatial diffusion through a network of human contacts.ObjectiveThe objective of this study is to develop an agent-based modelling approach the integrates geographic information systems (GIS) to simulate the spread of a communicable disease in an urban environment, as a result of individuals' interactions in a geospatial context.MethodsThe methodology for simulating spatiotemporal dynamics of communicable disease propagation is presented and the model is implemented using measles outbreak in an urban environment as a case study. Individuals in a closed population are explicitly represented by agents associated to places where they interact with other agents. They are endowed with mobility, through a transportation network allowing them to move between places within the urban environment, in order to represent the spatial heterogeneity and the complexity involved in infectious diseases diffusion. The model is implemented on georeferenced land use dataset from Metro Vancouver and makes use of census data sets from Statistics Canada for the municipality of Burnaby, BC, Canada study site.ResultsThe results provide insights into the application of the model to calculate ratios of susceptible/infected in specific time frames and urban environments, due to its ability to depict the disease progression based on individuals' interactions. It is demonstrated that the dynamic spatial interactions within the population lead to high numbers of exposed individuals who perform stationary activities in areas after they have finished commuting. As a result, the sick individuals are concentrated in geographical locations like schools and universities.ConclusionThe GIS-agent based model designed for this study can be easily customized to study the disease spread dynamics of any other communicable disease by simply adjusting the modeled disease timeline and/or the infection model and modifying the transmission process. This type of simulations can help to improve comprehension of disease spread dynamics and to take better steps towards the prevention and control of an epidemic outbreak.

Highlights

  • The propagation of communicable diseases through a population is an inherent spatial and temporal process of great importance for modern society

  • The geographic information systems (GIS)-agent based model designed for this study can be customized to study the disease spread dynamics of any other communicable disease by adjusting the modeled disease timeline and/or the infection model and modifying the transmission process

  • These results demonstrate that during the first day of interaction amongst population, at least 1% of the population were in contact with the infected individual and was exposed to the virus

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The propagation of communicable diseases through a population is an inherent spatial and temporal process of great importance for modern society For this reason a spatially explicit epidemiologic model of infectious disease is proposed for a greater understanding of the disease's spatial diffusion through a network of human contacts. Clear evidences that some infectious diseases in humans populations spread geographically are the three well-known recent examples of communicable disease spatial advance in the United Kingdom [3] and Canada [4,5]. For this reason, it is required to understand the complex dynamics of contagious illnesses given certain spatial environments. The neglect of the spatial component in the formulation of epidemic models can be solved by describing the spatial behaviour with the use of complex systems theory approaches

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.