Daily Mobility and the Spread of Communicable Infectious Diseases
Livre
Éric Daudé vient de publier un chapitre co-écrit avec Alexandre Cebeillac, intitulé Daily Mobility and the Spread of Communicable Infectious Diseases dans l’ouvrage Everyday Mobility and Health dirigé par Julie Vallée.
Communicable infectious diseases are caused by microorganisms, called pathogens (viruses, fungi, bacteria, parasites) that infect a living organism, called the host. This chapter summarizes the evolution of knowledge on the contagiousness of diseases and their modes of transmission in an epidemic context, emphasizing the link between daily mobility and epidemiology. It addresses the modeling of daily mobility and discusses different modeling methods and the concepts used in an epidemic context. Special emphasis is placed on the most recent classes of models, namely individual-based models. These models integrate geographic information as well as social and epidemiological knowledge into a single formalism, enabling exploration of a wide variety of scenarios. Finally, the chapter prompts a selective literature review, dedicated to the data currently in use to better understand daily mobility and to calibrate increasingly detailed epidemiological models.
Cebeillac A., Daudé É. (2024), Daily Mobility and the Spread of Communicable Infectious Diseases. In Vallée J. (dir.), Everyday Mobility and Health, Wiley ; ISTE, pp.1-41, SCIENCES - Infrastructure and Mobility Networks Geography, 9781789451092, https://doi.org/10.1002/9781394312498.ch1
2 octobre 2024