Pourbohloul Babak, Rekart Michael L, Brunham Robert C
University of British Columbia Centre for Disease Control, Vancouver, Canada.
Sex Transm Dis. 2003 Apr;30(4):297-305. doi: 10.1097/00007435-200304000-00005.
Since 1997 Vancouver (British Columbia, Canada) has experienced an outbreak of heterosexually transmitted infectious syphilis, which prompted a mass treatment campaign in early 2000 in an attempt to control the disease. By 1 year postintervention, syphilis cases had rebounded significantly. We investigate the cause of this postintervention rebound.
We argue that the observed rebound postintervention may have been the result of the natural dynamics of disease transmission in an open population, in response to the partial application of mass treatment in the sexually active subgroup.
We used a mathematical model that describes the transmission dynamics of syphilis in a population.
The observed postintervention rebound is related to the mass treatment intervention.
Our results suggest that mass treatment may not be an optimal strategy to control the transmission of syphilis if complete coverage of high-frequency transmitters cannot be achieved and if population mobility is relatively high.
自1997年以来,加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省温哥华市经历了异性传播感染性梅毒的疫情爆发,这促使在2000年初开展了大规模治疗行动,试图控制该疾病。到干预后1年,梅毒病例显著反弹。我们调查了这种干预后反弹的原因。
我们认为,观察到的干预后反弹可能是开放人群中疾病传播自然动态的结果,这是对性活跃亚组中大规模治疗的部分应用所做出的反应。
我们使用了一个描述梅毒在人群中传播动态的数学模型。
观察到的干预后反弹与大规模治疗干预有关。
我们的结果表明,如果无法实现对高频传播者的完全覆盖,并且如果人群流动性相对较高,那么大规模治疗可能不是控制梅毒传播的最佳策略。