Demographic Variability, Vaccination, and the Spatiotemporal Dynamics of Rotavirus Epidemics

Historically, annual rotavirus activity in the United States has started in the southwest in late fall and ended in the northeast 3 months later; this trend has diminished in recent years. Traveling waves of infection or local environmental drivers cannot account for these patterns. A transmission m...

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Veröffentlicht in:Science (American Association for the Advancement of Science) 2009-07, Vol.325 (5938), p.290-294
Hauptverfasser: Pitzer, Virginia E, Viboud, Cécile, Simonsen, Lone, Steiner, Claudia, Panozzo, Catherine A, Alonso, Wladimir J, Miller, Mark A, Glass, Roger I, Glasser, John W, Parashar, Umesh D, Grenfell, Bryan T
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Historically, annual rotavirus activity in the United States has started in the southwest in late fall and ended in the northeast 3 months later; this trend has diminished in recent years. Traveling waves of infection or local environmental drivers cannot account for these patterns. A transmission model calibrated against epidemiological data shows that spatiotemporal variation in birth rate can explain the timing of rotavirus epidemics. The recent large-scale introduction of rotavirus vaccination provides a natural experiment to further test the impact of susceptible recruitment on disease dynamics. The model predicts a pattern of reduced and lagged epidemics postvaccination, closely matching the observed dynamics. Armed with this validated model, we explore the relative importance of direct and indirect protection, a key issue in determining the worldwide benefits of vaccination.
ISSN:0036-8075
1095-9203
DOI:10.1126/science.1172330