Saenz Roberto A, Hethcote Herbert W, Gray Gregory C
Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Vector Borne Zoonotic Dis. 2006 Winter;6(4):338-46. doi: 10.1089/vbz.2006.6.338.
Influenza pandemics occur when a novel influenza strain, often of animal origin, becomes transmissible between humans. Domestic animal species such as poultry or swine in confined animal feeding operations (CAFOs) could serve as local amplifiers for such a new strain of influenza. A mathematical model is used to examine the transmission dynamics of a new influenza virus among three sequentially linked populations: the CAFO species, the CAFO workers (the bridging population), and the rest of the local human population. Using parameters based on swine data, simulations showed that when CAFO workers comprised 15-45% of the community, human influenza cases increased by 42-86%. Successful vaccination of at least 50% of CAFO workers cancelled the amplification. A human influenza epidemic due to a new virus could be locally amplified by the presence of confined animal feeding operations in the community. Thus vaccination of CAFO workers would be an effective use of a pandemic vaccine.
当一种通常源自动物的新型流感毒株在人与人之间具有传播性时,就会发生流感大流行。在集约化动物饲养场(CAFOs)中的家禽或猪等家畜物种可能成为这种新型流感毒株的本地放大器。一个数学模型被用于研究一种新型流感病毒在三个依次相连的群体中的传播动态:集约化动物饲养场中的动物物种、集约化动物饲养场的工人(桥梁群体)以及当地其他人群。使用基于猪的数据的参数,模拟结果表明,当集约化动物饲养场的工人占社区人口的15%-45%时,人类流感病例增加了42%-86%。至少50%的集约化动物饲养场工人成功接种疫苗可消除这种放大效应。社区中存在集约化动物饲养场可能会使由新型病毒引起的人类流感疫情在本地加剧。因此,为集约化动物饲养场的工人接种疫苗将是大流行疫苗的有效应用方式。