Transmission Dynamics and Control of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome
Ministry of Health · Harvard University · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) is a recently described illness of humans that has spread widely over the past 6 months. With the use of detailed epidemiologic data from Singapore and epidemic curves from other settings, we estimated the reproductive number for SARS in the absence of interventions and in the presence of control efforts. We estimate that a single infectious case of SARS will infect about three secondary cases in a population that has not yet instituted control measures. Public-health efforts to reduce transmission are expected to have a substantial impact on reducing the size of the epidemic.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 104.09
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 9
Authors
12- MLMarc Lipsitch
Ministry of Health, Harvard University, University of Utah, Hamilton Health Sciences, McMaster University
- TCTed Cohen
Ministry of Health, Harvard University, University of Utah, Hamilton Health Sciences, McMaster University
- BSBen S. Cooper
Ministry of Health, Harvard University, University of Utah, Hamilton Health Sciences, McMaster University
- JMJames M. Robins
Ministry of Health, Harvard University, University of Utah, Hamilton Health Sciences, McMaster University
- SMStefan Ma
Ministry of Health, Harvard University, University of Utah, Hamilton Health Sciences, McMaster University
Topics & keywords
- Transmission (telecommunications)
- Psychological intervention
- Respiratory illness
- Environmental health
- Medicine
- Public health
- Intensive care medicine
- Population
- Good health and well-being