Contact tracing for the control of infectious disease epidemics: Chronic Wasting Disease in deer farms

Contact tracing is a crucial component of the control of many infectious diseases, but is an arduous and time consuming process. Procedures that increase the efficiency of contact tracing increase the chance that effective controls can be implemented sooner and thus reduce the magnitude of the epide...

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Main Authors: Chris Rorres, Maria Romano, Jennifer A. Miller, Jana M. Mossey, Tony H. Grubesic, David E. Zellner, Gary Smith
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2018-06-01
Series:Epidemics
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1755436517301883
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spelling doaj-5e025b4a9efa404dbc69cd8c7c398be22020-11-25T02:24:45ZengElsevierEpidemics1755-43652018-06-01237175Contact tracing for the control of infectious disease epidemics: Chronic Wasting Disease in deer farmsChris Rorres0Maria Romano1Jennifer A. Miller2Jana M. Mossey3Tony H. Grubesic4David E. Zellner5Gary Smith6Section of Epidemiology and Public Health, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Kennett Square, PA, 19348, United States; Corresponding author.Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Drexel University School of Public Health, Bellet Building, 6th Floor, 1505 Race Street, Philadelphia, PA, 19102, United StatesDepartment of Geography and the Environment, 1 University Station A3100, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, 78712, United StatesDepartment of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, Drexel University, Nesbitt Hall, 3215 Market Street, Philadelphia, PA, 19104, United StatesCenter for Spatial Reasoning & Policy Analytics, College of Public Service and Community Solutions, Arizona State University, Phoenix, AZ, 85004, United StatesBureau of Animal Health and Diagnostic Services, Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, 2301 North Cameron Street, Harrisburg, PA, 17110, United StatesSection of Epidemiology and Public Health, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Kennett Square, PA, 19348, United StatesContact tracing is a crucial component of the control of many infectious diseases, but is an arduous and time consuming process. Procedures that increase the efficiency of contact tracing increase the chance that effective controls can be implemented sooner and thus reduce the magnitude of the epidemic. We illustrate a procedure using Graph Theory in the context of infectious disease epidemics of farmed animals in which the epidemics are driven mainly by the shipment of animals between farms. Specifically, we created a directed graph of the recorded shipments of deer between deer farms in Pennsylvania over a timeframe and asked how the properties of the graph could be exploited to make contact tracing more efficient should Chronic Wasting Disease (a prion disease of deer) be discovered in one of the farms. We show that the presence of a large strongly connected component in the graph has a significant impact on the number of contacts that can arise. Keywords: Chronic Wasting Disease, Contact tracing, Directed graphs, Strongly connected componentshttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1755436517301883
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chris Rorres
Maria Romano
Jennifer A. Miller
Jana M. Mossey
Tony H. Grubesic
David E. Zellner
Gary Smith
spellingShingle Chris Rorres
Maria Romano
Jennifer A. Miller
Jana M. Mossey
Tony H. Grubesic
David E. Zellner
Gary Smith
Contact tracing for the control of infectious disease epidemics: Chronic Wasting Disease in deer farms
Epidemics
author_facet Chris Rorres
Maria Romano
Jennifer A. Miller
Jana M. Mossey
Tony H. Grubesic
David E. Zellner
Gary Smith
author_sort Chris Rorres
title Contact tracing for the control of infectious disease epidemics: Chronic Wasting Disease in deer farms
title_short Contact tracing for the control of infectious disease epidemics: Chronic Wasting Disease in deer farms
title_full Contact tracing for the control of infectious disease epidemics: Chronic Wasting Disease in deer farms
title_fullStr Contact tracing for the control of infectious disease epidemics: Chronic Wasting Disease in deer farms
title_full_unstemmed Contact tracing for the control of infectious disease epidemics: Chronic Wasting Disease in deer farms
title_sort contact tracing for the control of infectious disease epidemics: chronic wasting disease in deer farms
publisher Elsevier
series Epidemics
issn 1755-4365
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Contact tracing is a crucial component of the control of many infectious diseases, but is an arduous and time consuming process. Procedures that increase the efficiency of contact tracing increase the chance that effective controls can be implemented sooner and thus reduce the magnitude of the epidemic. We illustrate a procedure using Graph Theory in the context of infectious disease epidemics of farmed animals in which the epidemics are driven mainly by the shipment of animals between farms. Specifically, we created a directed graph of the recorded shipments of deer between deer farms in Pennsylvania over a timeframe and asked how the properties of the graph could be exploited to make contact tracing more efficient should Chronic Wasting Disease (a prion disease of deer) be discovered in one of the farms. We show that the presence of a large strongly connected component in the graph has a significant impact on the number of contacts that can arise. Keywords: Chronic Wasting Disease, Contact tracing, Directed graphs, Strongly connected components
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1755436517301883
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