TY - JOUR
T1 - Medical and Entomological Malarial Interventions, a Comparison and Synergy of Two Control Measures Using a Ross/Macdonald Model Variant and Openmalaria Simulation
AU - Elliott, R. C.
AU - Smith, D. L.
AU - Echodu, D.
N1 - Elliott, R. C.; Smith, D. L.; and Echodu, D. (2018). "Medical and Entomological Malarial Interventions, a Comparison and Synergy of Two Control Measures Using a Ross/Macdonald Model Variant and Openmalaria Simulation". Mathematical Biosciences, 300, 187-200. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mbs.2018.04.005
PY - 2018/6/1
Y1 - 2018/6/1
N2 - Using an established Ross/Macdonald model variant for mosquito-born parasite transmission, we extend the formalism to simply incorporate time-dependent control measures. In particular, two interventions are considered, mass drug administration (MDA) and indoor residual spraying (IRS), whose individual intensities during their respective campaigns are set to the same intervention-reduced reproductive number R 0 . The impacts of these interventions, measured as each campaign’s ability over time to reduce infections in a community, are found based on the transmission setting, coverage, and their associated durations. These impacts are compared for both interventions and their joint deployment. Synchronous campaigns of IRS deployed with MDA have a cooperative, synergistic effect whose impact exceeds that when the campaigns are deployed in isolation. Simulations with openmalaria , with its more complex model of transmission, are separately performed and show a similar impact enhancement with these interventions. A new, associated analysis yields simple scaling relationships that estimate the dynamical resurgence time, post-intervention, to infection proliferation in a community.
AB - Using an established Ross/Macdonald model variant for mosquito-born parasite transmission, we extend the formalism to simply incorporate time-dependent control measures. In particular, two interventions are considered, mass drug administration (MDA) and indoor residual spraying (IRS), whose individual intensities during their respective campaigns are set to the same intervention-reduced reproductive number R 0 . The impacts of these interventions, measured as each campaign’s ability over time to reduce infections in a community, are found based on the transmission setting, coverage, and their associated durations. These impacts are compared for both interventions and their joint deployment. Synchronous campaigns of IRS deployed with MDA have a cooperative, synergistic effect whose impact exceeds that when the campaigns are deployed in isolation. Simulations with openmalaria , with its more complex model of transmission, are separately performed and show a similar impact enhancement with these interventions. A new, associated analysis yields simple scaling relationships that estimate the dynamical resurgence time, post-intervention, to infection proliferation in a community.
KW - Ross/Macdonald
KW - indoor residual spraying
KW - malaria
KW - mass drug administration
KW - openmalaria
KW - simulation
UR - https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/mecheng_facpubs/91
U2 - 10.1016/j.mbs.2018.04.005
DO - 10.1016/j.mbs.2018.04.005
M3 - Article
C2 - 29655551
SN - 1879-3134
VL - 300
SP - 187
EP - 200
JO - Mathematical Biosciences
JF - Mathematical Biosciences
ER -