Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B (2006) 273:2743-2748
Abstract:
The spread of infectious disease through communities depends fundamentally
on the underlying patterns of contacts between individuals. Generally, the more
contacts one individual has, the more vulnerable they are to infection during an
epidemic. Thus, outbreaks disproportionately impact the most highly connected
demographics. Epidemics can then lead, through immunization or removal of
individuals, to sparser networks that are more resistant to future transmission
of a given disease. Using several classes of contact networks -- Poisson,
scale-free and small-world -- we characterize the structural evolution of a
network due to an epidemic in terms of frailty (the degree to which highly
connected individuals are more vulnerable to infection) and interference (the
extent to which the epidemic cuts off connectivity among the susceptible
population that remains following an epidemic). The evolution of the susceptible
network over the course of an epidemic differs among the classes of networks;
frailty, relative to interference, accounts for an increasing component of
network evolution on networks with greater variance in contacts. The result is
that immunization due to prior epidemics can provide greater community
protection than random vaccination on networks with heterogeneous contact
patterns, while the reverse is true for highly structured populations.
Keywords: epidemiology; frailty; herd immunity; social network; vaccination
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