Litcius/Paper detail

Clustering of susceptible individuals within households can drive measles outbreaks: an individual-based model exploration

Elise Kuylen, Lander Willem, J. Broeckhove, Philippe Beutels, Niel Hens

2020Scientific Reports23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

When estimating important measures such as the herd immunity threshold, and the corresponding efforts required to eliminate measles, it is often assumed that susceptible individuals are uniformly distributed throughout populations. However, unvaccinated individuals may be clustered in a variety of ways, including by geographic location, by age, in schools, or in households. Here, we investigate to which extent different levels of within-household clustering of susceptible individuals may impact the risk and persistence of measles outbreaks. To this end, we apply an individual-based model, Stride, to a population of 600,000 individuals, using data from Flanders, Belgium. We construct a metric to estimate the level of within-household susceptibility clustering in the population. Furthermore, we compare realistic scenarios regarding the distribution of susceptible individuals within households in terms of their impact on epidemiological measures for outbreak risk and persistence. We find that higher levels of within-household clustering of susceptible individuals increase the risk, size and persistence of measles outbreaks. Ignoring within-household clustering thus leads to underestimations of required measles elimination and outbreak mitigation efforts.

Topics & Concepts

MeaslesOutbreakCluster analysisHerd immunityPersistence (discontinuity)PopulationMetric (unit)DemographyGeographyEnvironmental healthStatisticsBiologyMedicineMathematicsVirologyVaccinationBusinessMarketingGeotechnical engineeringSociologyEngineeringCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesVirology and Viral DiseasesVaccine Coverage and Hesitancy