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Pareto rules for malaria super-spreaders and super-spreading.

Laura CooperSu Yun KangDonal BisanzioKilama MaxwellIsabel Rodriguez-BarraquerBryan GreenhouseChris J DrakeleyEmmanuel ArinaitweSarah G StaedkePeter W GethingPhilip EckhoffRobert C ReinerSimon I HayGrant DorseyMoses R KamyaSteven W LindsayBryan T GrenfellDavid L Smith
Published in: Nature communications (2019)
Heterogeneity in transmission is a challenge for infectious disease dynamics and control. An 80-20 "Pareto" rule has been proposed to describe this heterogeneity whereby 80% of transmission is accounted for by 20% of individuals, herein called super-spreaders. It is unclear, however, whether super-spreading can be attributed to certain individuals or whether it is an unpredictable and unavoidable feature of epidemics. Here, we investigate heterogeneous malaria transmission at three sites in Uganda and find that super-spreading is negatively correlated with overall malaria transmission intensity. Mosquito biting among humans is 90-10 at the lowest transmission intensities declining to less than 70-30 at the highest intensities. For super-spreaders, biting ranges from 70-30 down to 60-40. The difference, approximately half the total variance, is due to environmental stochasticity. Super-spreading is thus partly due to super-spreaders, but modest gains are expected from targeting super-spreaders.
Keyphrases
  • infectious diseases
  • plasmodium falciparum
  • machine learning
  • risk assessment
  • cancer therapy
  • human health
  • aedes aegypti
  • life cycle