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Stochastic modelling of the spatial spread of influenza in Germany

Authors :
Dargatz, C
Georgescu, V
Held, L
Dargatz, C
Georgescu, V
Held, L
Source :
Dargatz, C; Georgescu, V; Held, L (2006). Stochastic modelling of the spatial spread of influenza in Germany. Austrian Journal of Statistics, 35(1):5-20.
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

In geographical epidemiology, disease counts are typically available in discrete spatial units and at discrete time-points. For example, surveillance data on infectious diseases usually consists of weekly counts of new infections in pre-defined geographical areas. Similarly, but on a different time-scale, cancer registries typically report yearly incidence or mortality counts in administrative regions. A major methodological challenge lies in building realistic models for space-time interactions on discrete irregular spatial graphs. In this paper, we will discuss an observation-driven approach, where past observed counts in neighbouring areas enter directly as explanatory variables, in contrast to the parameter-driven approach through latent Gaussian Markov random fields (Rue and Held, 2005) with spatio-temporal structure. The main focus will lie on the demonstration of the spread of influenza in Germany, obtained through the design and simulation of a spatial extension of the classical SIR model (Hufnagel et al., 2004).

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Dargatz, C; Georgescu, V; Held, L (2006). Stochastic modelling of the spatial spread of influenza in Germany. Austrian Journal of Statistics, 35(1):5-20.
Notes :
application/pdf, info:doi/10.5167/uzh-36450, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1030044550
Document Type :
Electronic Resource