Authors
Amy Wesolowski, Caroline O Buckee, Kenth Engø-Monsen, CJE Metcalf
Publication date
2016/11/14
Journal
The Journal of Infectious Diseases
Volume
214
Issue
suppl_4
Pages
S414-S420
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Human travel can shape infectious disease dynamics by introducing pathogens into susceptible populations or by changing the frequency of contacts between infected and susceptible individuals. Quantifying infectious disease–relevant travel patterns on fine spatial and temporal scales has historically been limited by data availability. The recent emergence of mobile phone calling data and associated locational information means that we can now trace fine scale movement across large numbers of individuals. However, these data necessarily reflect a biased sample of individuals across communities and are generally aggregated for both ethical and pragmatic reasons that may further obscure the nuance of individual and spatial heterogeneities. Additionally, as a general rule, the mobile phone data are not linked to demographic or social identifiers, or to information about the disease status of individual …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
A Wesolowski, CO Buckee, K Engø-Monsen… - The Journal of infectious diseases, 2016