作为流行病学资源的历史疾病数据:寻找1878年田纳西州孟菲斯黄热病流行的起源和当地基本复制数

S. Wright Kennedy, Andrew J. Curtis, Jacqueline W. Curtis
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引用次数: 8

摘要

新出现和重新出现的传染病继续引起相当大的区域和全球关切。地理学家的一个重要贡献是发展对这些流行病在不同尺度上的空间结构的理解。保密问题和普遍缺乏来自许多发展中国家地区的个人数据意味着往往无法获得个人或次社区规模的流行病信息。另一个潜在的数据来源是历史流行病。虽然这些数据以卫生委员会报告的形式存在,但这些数据不应被视为完整,研究人员有责任对数据验证和确定补充的空间和文化背景进行尽职调查。本文以1878年孟菲斯黄热病流行为例,介绍了这种方法任务的一个例子,它导致了两个重要的空间问题的探索:该流行病在城市中的正确起源及其相关的当地基本复制数,即源于原始病例的后续病例数。本文应被视为后续一系列精细尺度历史流行病分析的模板,这些分析可以为进一步发展空间流行病学理论提供一个重要渠道。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Historic Disease Data as Epidemiological Resource: Searching for the Origin and Local Basic Reproduction Number of the 1878 Yellow Fever Epidemic in Memphis, Tennessee
Emerging and reemerging infectious diseases continue to pose considerable regional and global concerns. A vital contribution to be made by geographers is in developing an understanding of the spatial structure of these epidemics across various scales. Confidentiality concerns and a general lack of individual data from many developing world areas mean that individual or subneighborhood-scale epidemic information is often unavailable. One alternative potential source of data is historical epidemics. Although these data exist in the form of board of health reports, these should not be considered complete, and the onus is on the researcher to perform due diligence on data validation and identifying supplementary spatial and cultural context. This article presents an example of such a methodological task for the 1878 yellow fever epidemic of Memphis, which leads to exploration of two important spatial questions: the correct origin of the epidemic in the city and its associated local basic reproduction number, which is the number of ensuing cases stemming from an original. This article should be viewed as a template for a subsequent series of fine-scale historical epidemic analyses, which together can produce an important conduit into further development of spatial epidemiological theory.
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