Predictive models of control strategies involved in containing indoor airborne infections
Resource
Indoor Air 16 (6): 469-481
Journal
Indoor Air
Journal Volume
16
Journal Issue
6
Pages
469-481
Date Issued
2006
Date
2006
Author(s)
Abstract
Recently developed control measure modeling approaches for containing airborne infections, including engineering controls with respiratory protection and public health interventions, are readily amenable to an integrated-scale analysis. Here we show that such models can be derived from an integrated-scale analysis generated from three different types of functional relationship: Wells-Riley mathematical model, competing-risks model, and Von Foerster equation, both of the key epidemiological determinants involved and of the functional connections between them. We examine mathematically the impact of engineering control measures such as enhanced air exchange and air filtration rates with personal masking combined with public health interventions such as vaccination, isolation, and contact tracing in containing the spread of indoor airborne infections including influenza, chickenpox, measles, and severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS). If enhanced engineering controls could reduce the basic reproductive number (R0) below 1.60 for chickenpox and 3 for measles, our simulations show that in such a prepared response with public health interventions would have a high probability of containing the indoor airborne infections. Combinations of engineering control measures and public health interventions could moderately contain influenza strains with an R 0 as high as 4. Our analysis indicates that effective isolation of symptomatic patients with low-efficacy contact tracing is sufficient to control a SARS outbreak. We suggest that a valuable added dimension to public health inventions could be provided by systematically quantifying transmissibility and proportion of asymptomatic infection of indoor airborne infection. ? 2006 Blackwell Munksgaard.
SDGs
Other Subjects
aircraft; article; chickenpox; forecasting; hospital; human; indoor air pollution; infection control; influenza; measles; methodology; school; severe acute respiratory syndrome; Taiwan; theoretical model; Air Pollution, Indoor; Aircraft; Chickenpox; Forecasting; Hospitals; Humans; Infection Control; Influenza, Human; Measles; Models, Theoretical; Schools; Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome; Taiwan
Type
journal article
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