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Strategies
to rein in Disease Epidemics Need to be
Retooled for Rural Populations, Say Computer
Engineers
Newswise — An infectious disease striking a
large city may seem like a disastrous
scenario -- millions of people sharing
apartment buildings, crammed on buses and
trains and brushing past one another on
crowded sidewalks.
A group of Kansas State University engineers
is finding that a truly disastrous epidemic
scenario could also take place in the
wide-open spaces of the Great Plains.
Caterina Scoglio, associate professor of
electrical and computer engineering, is
leading an Epicenter research project called
SGER: Exploratory research on complex
network approach to epidemic spreading in
rural regions.
Scoglio is working with Todd Easton,
associate professor of industrial and
manufacturing systems engineering; Robert
Kooij, adjunct associate professor of
electrical and computer engineering; and
Walter Schumm, professor of family studies
and human services.
With funding from the National Science
Foundation, they are using academic models
to study the spread of diseases in rural
areas. Their goal is to identify optimal
strategies to forecast and control disease
outbreaks in rural areas.
"What are used as mitigation strategies in
cities will not be so effective in rural
areas," Scoglio said. "In cities, people
have a lot of informal contact with one
another but looser ties."
This means that during a disease outbreak,
urban residents are less likely to interact
with sick neighbors and therefore less
likely to contract or spread a disease.
On the other hand, Schumm found that 35
percent of rural residents would be willing
to visit other people in the community
during a major epidemic, citing the results
of a rural survey recently conducted as part
of the project.
"In a rural setting, you're maybe more
likely to watch out for all of your
neighbors, and your neighbors may also be
your uncles, aunts and other family
members," Easton said.
Easton's research group ran a computer
simulation on a hypothetical disease
outbreak in a rural town in which on Day 1
everyone is healthy. By Day 20, they found
that everyone would have contracted the
disease.
"We found that person-to-person contact is
most important," Easton said.
"Having a population with two times as many
interpersonal contacts is more dangerous
than a disease that is twice as virulent.
"This
shows that the government's ability to limit
travel during an epidemic is very
important."
Not only does their research show that rural
residents may be more likely to maintain
normal levels of social contact than urban
residents, but the researchers said that the
decreased access to hospitals and physicians
also make rural areas especially vulnerable
during an epidemic.
The computer models suggest that vaccines be
administered to people who have contact with
the largest network of friends, family,
co-workers and neighbors.
Scoglio said that it would be equally
important to vaccinate people who don't have
many contacts themselves but who are a
common link between two well-connected
communities.
The researchers don't see technology like
cell phones and Web calling reducing
person-to-person contact among rural
residents during an epidemic in the way it
would for urban residents.
For one thing, Easton said, rural
populations tend to be older and may not
have adopted some technologies as rapidly.
Also, high-speed internet connections and
cellular phone service can be limited in
rural areas, encouraging more interpersonal
interactions in a major epidemic event.
The research was presented in Hyogo, Japan,
in Delft, Netherlands, and most recently at
the International Federation for Information
Processing Networking 2009 in Aachen,
Germany. It also is slated to appear in
multiple academic journals.
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