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80/20 rule
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#94509
Rule of thumb that 20% of the people in a community contribute 80% of the contacts (disease, infection, susceptibility, etc.) and vice versa: Woolhouse et al.
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Controlling Infectious Diseases »
Controlling Infectious Diseases
Controlling Infectious DiseasesâMapping the issues around endemic diseasesâsuch as malaria, measles, influenza, HIV, Dengue and West Nile Virusâwith the aims of identifying improved control strategies and of providing insights into to the work of mathematical biologists, epidemiologists and public health officials in this field.âF1CEB7
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Lessons from mathematical modelling »
Lessons from mathematical modelling
Lessons from mathematical modellingâWhat have been the key public health lessons, principles and contributions from the field of mathematical modelling so far?â59C6EF
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Heterogeneity / core groups »
Heterogeneity / core groups
Heterogeneity / core groupsâA small core group of disease transmitters may account for a large percentage of cases.â59C6EF
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80/20 rule
80/20 ruleâRule of thumb that 20% of the people in a community contribute 80% of the contacts (disease, infection, susceptibility, etc.) and vice versa: Woolhouse et al.â9FDEF6
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En citant:
Woolhouse et al.
Cité par:
Ben Bolker
7:40 PM 5 March 2011 GMT
URL:
http://www.pnas.org/content/94/1/338.full
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Abstract: From an analysis of the distributions of measures of transmission rates among hosts, we identify an empirical relationship suggesting that, typically, 20% of the host population contributes at least 80% of the net transmission potential, as measured by the basic reproduction number, R 0. This is an example of a statistical pattern known as the 20/80 rule. The rule applies to a variety of disease systems, including vector-borne parasites and sexually transmitted pathogens. The rule implies that control programs targeted at the âcoreâ 20% group are potentially highly effective and, conversely, that programs that fail to reach all of this group will be much less effective than expected in reducing levels of infection in the population as a whole.
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Entrée par:
Ben Bolker
NodeID:
#94509
Node type:
Component
Date d'entrée (GMT):
3/4/2011 4:52:00 PM
Date de la derniĂšre modification (Heure GMT):
3/8/2011 5:08:00 PM
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