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Large-scale spatial population databases in infectious disease research

DOI: 10.1186/1476-072x-11-7

Keywords: Human population, Global, Infectious diseases, Spatial demography, Health metrics

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Abstract:

Mapping and modelling methods used to study the spatial distribution and spread of vector-borne and directly transmitted infectious diseases are becoming increasingly widespread and sophisticated as the field of spatial epidemiology grows. Spatial epidemiology is defined as "the study of spatial variation in disease risk or incidence" [1], and its aims are both to describe and to understand these variations [2], with the ultimate objective being to assist public health decision making. Interactions between pathogens, vectors and hosts, and between these agents and their environment determine spatial variations in disease risk and make the transmission of vector-borne and other infectious diseases an intrinsically spatial process [1,3].Most studies on infectious disease dynamics are not spatially-explicit, i.e. elements are not explicitly localized in space. Models are typically based on the metapopulation concept, which considers isolated subpopulations subject to colonization and extinction dynamics [4-6]. If the species of interest is a parasite, colonization means infection and a local extinction occurs when the host dies or recovers [5]. This approach is spatially-implicit, as it avoids the use of geographical maps to locate elements. In the majority of non-spatial mathematical models of infectious diseases, the total population is assumed to be constant [7], but population data have been included, for instance, in non-spatial models of HIV [8], pertussis [9], malaria [7], or in global burden of disease calculations [10-16]. However, the spatial nature of infectious diseases, and particularly spatial heterogeneities in transmission and spread, make risk maps and spatially-explicit models of disease incidence valuable tools for understanding disease dynamics and planning public health interventions [1,2,17]. Defining the extent of infectious diseases as a public health burden and their distribution and dynamics in time and space are critical to scoping the financ

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