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Modeling the Effect of School Closures in a Pandemic Scenario: Exploring Two Different Contact Matrices.

Authors :
Isaac Chun-Hai Fung
Gambhir, Manoj
Glasser, John W.
Gao, Hongjiang
Washington, Michael L.
Uzicanin, Amra
Meltzer, Martin I.
Source :
Clinical Infectious Diseases. May2015 Supplement 1, Vol. 60, pS58-S63. 6p.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Background. School closures may delay the epidemic peak of the next influenza pandemic, but whether school closure can delay the peak until pandemic vaccine is ready to be deployed is uncertain. Methods. To study the effect of school closures on the timing of epidemic peaks, we built a deterministic susceptibleinfected- recovered model of influenza transmission. We stratified the U.S. population into 4 age groups (0-4, 5-19, 20-64, and ⩾65 years), and used contact matrices to model the average number of potentially disease transmitting, nonphysical contacts. Results. For everyweek of school closure at day 5 of introduction and a 30% clinical attack rate scenario, epidemic peak would be delayed by approximately 5 days. For a 15% clinical attack rate scenario, 1 week closure would delay the peak by 9 days. Closing schools for less than 84 days (12 weeks) would not, however, reduce the estimated total number of cases. Conclusions. Unless vaccine is available early, school closure alone may not be able to delay the peak until vaccine is ready to be deployed. Conversely, if vaccination begins quickly, school closure may be helpful in providing the time to vaccinate school-aged children before the pandemic peaks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10584838
Volume :
60
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Clinical Infectious Diseases
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
102539124
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/civ086