Journal ArticleOpen Access
Refractory periods and climate forcing in cholera dynamics
Authors
Author Affiliations
University of Michigan–Ann Arbor, Barcelona Biomedical Research Park, Institució Catalana de Recerca i Estudis Avançats, Universitat de Barcelona, ...
Published InNature
Year2005
Citations426
Abstract
Outbreaks of many infectious diseases, including cholera, malaria and dengue, vary over characteristic periods longer than 1 year. Evidence that climate variability drives these interannual cycles has been highly controversial, chiefly because it is difficult to isolate the contribution of environmental forcing while taking into account nonlinear epidemiological dynamics generated by mechanisms such as host immunity. Here we show that a critical interplay of environmental forcing, specifically climate variability, and temporary immunity explains the interannual disease cycles present in a four-decade cholera time series from Matlab, Bangladesh. We reconstruct the transmission rate, the key epidemiological parameter affected by extrinsic forcing, over time for the predominant strain (El Tor) with a nonlinear population model that permits a contributing effect of intrinsic…
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