A conceptual theoretical model was built on the basis of prominent concepts of the generally accepted knowledge on the spread of contagious disease. Subsequently, the model was applied to a real epidemic of variola minor (the mild form of smallpox) and four phases of the epidemic were disclosed. The phases discriminated themselves through their relationships to invasion of certain city subdivisions and rural districts and particularly, through the type of social units involved and the type of persons introducing the disease into these units.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConcepts used to analyze sociological, geographic, and economic processes were adapted to an examination of the diffusion of contagious disease. The example used in applying these concepts was an epidemic of variola minor which continued for 12 months in an area of 1,006 square kilometers centered on the city of Bragança Paulista, Sao Paulo State (Brazil). A graphic procedure is proposed that depicts aspects of the epidemic flow of person-to-person transmission.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBull Soc Pathol Exot Filiales
May 1980
A methodology for contour-map study of contagious-disease epidemics is presented. Its application is exemplified in a smallpox epidemic occurring in a small Brazilian town. Computer-controlled contour-mapping of dates of introduction of variola minor into 169 households and the coordinates of the affected dwellings did not show a single contour pattern, but a group of subareal patterns of within-household outbreaks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBull Soc Pathol Exot Filiales
January 1980
Occasional observations on the clinical course of 485 cases of variola minor composing an epidemic are reported. 17% of the cases showed a complication. Otitis was observed in one case.
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