Edge effects in spatial infectious disease models.

Spat Spatiotemporal Epidemiol

Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Calgary, Mathematical Sciences 476, 2500 University Drive NW, T2N 1N4, Calgary, AB, Canada; Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Calgary, CWPH1E31, 3280 Hospital Drive NW, T2N 4Z6, Calgary, AB, Canada. Electronic address:

Published: August 2024

Epidemic models serve as a useful analytical tool to study how a disease behaves in a given population. Individual-level models (ILMs) can incorporate individual-level covariate information including spatial information, accounting for heterogeneity within the population. However, the high-level data required to parameterize an ILM may often be available only for a sub-population of a larger population (e.g., a given county, province, or country). As a result, parameter estimates may be affected by edge effects caused by infection originating from outside the observed population. Here, we look at how such edge effects can bias parameter estimates for within the context of spatial ILMs, and suggest a method to improve model fitting in the presence of edge effects when some global measure of epidemic severity is available from the unobserved part of the population. We apply our models to simulated data, as well as data from the UK 2001 foot-and-mouth disease epidemic.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.sste.2024.100673DOI Listing

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