Analyzing the spatial distribution pattern of infection cases using mathematical likelihood: Implication on airborne disease transmission and risk assessment

Gin Nam Sze-To, Christopher Y.H. Chao, Man Pun Wan

Research output: Unpublished conference presentation (presented paper, abstract, poster)Conference presentation (not published in journal/proceeding/book)Academic researchpeer-review

Abstract

This study proposes a method to analyze the spatial distribution of infection cases in outbreaks of airborne transmissible diseases. Infection risk assessment is first performed to estimate the infection risks of the susceptible people in the outbreak. A modified likelihood function could then be used to establish the likelihood of the estimated infection risk which is the true infection risk. The method can be used to estimate unknown parameters in the outbreak, such as the infectious source strength. A real outbreak of chickenpox was analyzed to demonstrate the use of the proposed method. It was found that the estimation of the quanta generation rate using the classical well-mixed assumption would cause significant error in the selected outbreak case.

Original languageEnglish
Publication statusPublished - 2009
Event9th International Healthy Buildings Conference and Exhibition, HB 2009 - Syracuse, NY, United States
Duration: 13 Sept 200917 Sept 2009

Conference

Conference9th International Healthy Buildings Conference and Exhibition, HB 2009
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CitySyracuse, NY
Period13/09/0917/09/09

Keywords

  • Airborne transmission
  • Infection risk assessment
  • Likelihood estimation
  • Outbreak investigation
  • Spatial pattern

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Civil and Structural Engineering
  • Building and Construction

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