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Elasticity analysis in epidemiology: an application to tick-borne infections
Authors:Amy Matser  Nienke Hartemink  Hans Heesterbeek  Alison Galvani  Stephen Davis
Institution:Theoretical Epidemiology, Yalelaan 7, University of Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands;
School of Public Health, 60 College Street, Yale University, New Haven, USA
Abstract:The application of projection matrices in population biology to plant and animal populations has a parallel in infectious disease ecology when next-generation matrices (NGMs) are used to characterize growth in numbers of infected hosts ( R 0). The NGM is appropriate for multi-host pathogens, where each matrix element represents the number of cases of one type of host arising from a single infected individual of another type. For projection matrices, calculations of the sensitivity and elasticity of the population growth rate to changes in the matrix elements has generated insight into plant and animal populations. These same perturbation analyses can be used for infectious disease systems. To illustrate this in detail we parameterized an NGM for seven tick-borne zoonoses and compared them in terms of the contributions to R 0 from three different routes of transmission between ticks, and between ticks and vertebrate hosts. The definition of host type may be the species of the host or the route of infection, or, as was the case for the set of tick-borne pathogens, a combination of species and the life stage at infection. This freedom means that there is a broad range of disease systems and questions for which the methodology is appropriate.
Keywords:Anaplasma phagocytophila                        Borrelia burgdorferi            Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever virus  elasticities  Kyasanur forest disease virus  next-generation matrix              Rickettsia rickettsii            Thogoto virus  tick-borne encephalitis virus
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