AbstractThis paper develops a statistical framework for a retrospective analysis for well-observed livestock epidemics during which intervention policies may conceal cases, thus potentially biasing naively derived parameter and final size estimates. We apply the methods to the 2001 foot and mouth epidemic (FMD) in Great Britain, during which a large number of farms (about 7500) were pre-emptively culled as part of the control effort without ever being diagnosed as being infected. We infer farm-level infectivity and susceptibility parameters, a distribution for the delay from infection to report, together with a time varying farm infectivity profile for farms. Hidden infections among proactively culled farms were accounted for using a data a...
The foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) virus poses a considerable threat both to farmers and to the wider...
To control an outbreak of an infectious disease it is essential to understand the different routes o...
Susceptible host density is a key factor that influences the success of invading pathogens. However,...
AbstractThis paper develops a statistical framework for a retrospective analysis for well-observed l...
AbstractThis paper uses statistical and mathematical models to examine the potential impact of withi...
Despite intensive ongoing research, key aspects of the spatial-temporal evolution of the 2001 foot a...
AbstractBackgroundAn understanding of the factors that determine the risk of members of a susceptibl...
During 2007 the UK experienced outbreaks of three notifiable exotic livestock diseases; Foot and Mo...
Since 2001 models of the spread of foot-and-mouth disease, supported by the data from the UK epidemi...
Efficient parameter estimation is increasingly recognised to be essential in fitting epidemic model...
Livestock diseases have devastating consequences economically, socially, and politically across the ...
Epidemics can sometimes be managed through reductions of host density, such as social distancing for...
Most of the mathematical models that were developed to study the UK 2001 foot-and-mouth disease epid...
Transboundary livestock diseases are a high priority for policy makers because of the serious econom...
Infectious diseases on farms pose both public and animal health risks, so understanding how they spr...
The foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) virus poses a considerable threat both to farmers and to the wider...
To control an outbreak of an infectious disease it is essential to understand the different routes o...
Susceptible host density is a key factor that influences the success of invading pathogens. However,...
AbstractThis paper develops a statistical framework for a retrospective analysis for well-observed l...
AbstractThis paper uses statistical and mathematical models to examine the potential impact of withi...
Despite intensive ongoing research, key aspects of the spatial-temporal evolution of the 2001 foot a...
AbstractBackgroundAn understanding of the factors that determine the risk of members of a susceptibl...
During 2007 the UK experienced outbreaks of three notifiable exotic livestock diseases; Foot and Mo...
Since 2001 models of the spread of foot-and-mouth disease, supported by the data from the UK epidemi...
Efficient parameter estimation is increasingly recognised to be essential in fitting epidemic model...
Livestock diseases have devastating consequences economically, socially, and politically across the ...
Epidemics can sometimes be managed through reductions of host density, such as social distancing for...
Most of the mathematical models that were developed to study the UK 2001 foot-and-mouth disease epid...
Transboundary livestock diseases are a high priority for policy makers because of the serious econom...
Infectious diseases on farms pose both public and animal health risks, so understanding how they spr...
The foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) virus poses a considerable threat both to farmers and to the wider...
To control an outbreak of an infectious disease it is essential to understand the different routes o...
Susceptible host density is a key factor that influences the success of invading pathogens. However,...