Optimizing reactive responses to outbreaks of immunizing infections: balancing case management and vaccination.

For vaccine-preventable infections, immunization generally needs to be supplemented by palliative care of individuals missed by the vaccination. Costs and availability of vaccine doses and palliative care vary by disease and by region. In many situations, resources for delivery of palliative care ar...

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Main Authors: Petra Klepac, Ottar N Bjørnstad, C Jessica E Metcalf, Bryan T Grenfell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/22899996/pdf/?tool=EBI
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author Petra Klepac
Ottar N Bjørnstad
C Jessica E Metcalf
Bryan T Grenfell
author_facet Petra Klepac
Ottar N Bjørnstad
C Jessica E Metcalf
Bryan T Grenfell
author_sort Petra Klepac
collection DOAJ
description For vaccine-preventable infections, immunization generally needs to be supplemented by palliative care of individuals missed by the vaccination. Costs and availability of vaccine doses and palliative care vary by disease and by region. In many situations, resources for delivery of palliative care are independent of resources required for vaccination; however we also need to consider the conservative scenario where there is some trade-off between efforts, which is of potential relevance for resource-poor settings. We formulate an SEIR model that includes those two control strategies--vaccination and palliative care. We consider their relative merit and optimal allocation in the context of a highly efficacious vaccine, and under the assumption that palliative care may reduce transmission. We investigate the utility of a range of mixed or pure strategies that can be implemented after an epidemic has started, and look for rule-of-thumb principles of how best to reduce the burden of disease during an acute outbreak over a spectrum of vaccine-preventable infections. Intuitively, we expect the best strategy to initially focus on vaccination, and enhanced palliative care after the infection has peaked, but a number of plausible realistic constraints for control result in important qualifications on the intervention strategy. The time in the epidemic when one should switch strategy depends sensitively on the relative cost of vaccine to palliative care, the available budget, and R0. Crucially, outbreak response vaccination may be more effective in managing low-R0 diseases, while high R0 scenarios enhance the importance of routine vaccination and case management.
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spelling doaj.art-aad2173aa46b46078ca9941dc4fe85132022-12-21T22:54:12ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0178e4142810.1371/journal.pone.0041428Optimizing reactive responses to outbreaks of immunizing infections: balancing case management and vaccination.Petra KlepacOttar N BjørnstadC Jessica E MetcalfBryan T GrenfellFor vaccine-preventable infections, immunization generally needs to be supplemented by palliative care of individuals missed by the vaccination. Costs and availability of vaccine doses and palliative care vary by disease and by region. In many situations, resources for delivery of palliative care are independent of resources required for vaccination; however we also need to consider the conservative scenario where there is some trade-off between efforts, which is of potential relevance for resource-poor settings. We formulate an SEIR model that includes those two control strategies--vaccination and palliative care. We consider their relative merit and optimal allocation in the context of a highly efficacious vaccine, and under the assumption that palliative care may reduce transmission. We investigate the utility of a range of mixed or pure strategies that can be implemented after an epidemic has started, and look for rule-of-thumb principles of how best to reduce the burden of disease during an acute outbreak over a spectrum of vaccine-preventable infections. Intuitively, we expect the best strategy to initially focus on vaccination, and enhanced palliative care after the infection has peaked, but a number of plausible realistic constraints for control result in important qualifications on the intervention strategy. The time in the epidemic when one should switch strategy depends sensitively on the relative cost of vaccine to palliative care, the available budget, and R0. Crucially, outbreak response vaccination may be more effective in managing low-R0 diseases, while high R0 scenarios enhance the importance of routine vaccination and case management.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/22899996/pdf/?tool=EBI
spellingShingle Petra Klepac
Ottar N Bjørnstad
C Jessica E Metcalf
Bryan T Grenfell
Optimizing reactive responses to outbreaks of immunizing infections: balancing case management and vaccination.
PLoS ONE
title Optimizing reactive responses to outbreaks of immunizing infections: balancing case management and vaccination.
title_full Optimizing reactive responses to outbreaks of immunizing infections: balancing case management and vaccination.
title_fullStr Optimizing reactive responses to outbreaks of immunizing infections: balancing case management and vaccination.
title_full_unstemmed Optimizing reactive responses to outbreaks of immunizing infections: balancing case management and vaccination.
title_short Optimizing reactive responses to outbreaks of immunizing infections: balancing case management and vaccination.
title_sort optimizing reactive responses to outbreaks of immunizing infections balancing case management and vaccination
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/22899996/pdf/?tool=EBI
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