Epidemic Curves Flashcards
Epidemic curve
A graphical depiction of the number of cases of an illness or deaths by the date of onset/occurrence
- An anatomy of an epidemic
- An Incidence curve
- Shows increase and decrease of new disease cases, and the rate of change in disease occurrence
What kind of information can you get from epidemic curves?
- Pattern of spread
- Magnitude of outbreak
- Outliers
- Time trends
- Sometimes can determine Exposure and disease incubation period
- Effects of control efforts and mitigation strategies
Point source epidemic curve
Appears bell- shaped (sharp upward and downward curve); clustering of disease
- Peak usually at average incubation period. Variation in number of cases will occur due to other factors like immune system efficiency
Common source and event; often a brief exposure period. All cases occur within one incubation period of the casual event
- Ex. Food poisoning event
Continuous common source epidemic curve
Single source of exposure but with a prolonged exposure period occurring over a long time so the outbreak persists longer (no cases beyond one incubation period following termination of exposure)
Curve: no steep or gradual numbers. Numbers quite high throughout entire time of exposure period
Relatively abrupt beginning (exposure simultaneously rather than spreading through transmission)
Ex. Lead poisoning exposure where source of lead is not discovered OR contaminated water supply
Spread-propagated outbreak curve
Epidemic caused by infectious agent. Spread from individual to individual (primary and secondary cases).
- Can last longer than common source outbreaks.
- May have multiple waves
- Curve: Progressively taller peaks (incubation period apart). Characterized by build-up or amplification
Spread-propagated outbreak examples
- COVID-19
- Foot and Mouth Disease
- Ebola
Index case
The first primary case that comes to the attention of the investigators during a Spread-propagated outbreaks
What sort of things does an Ebola Epidemic curve tell you?
- Case fatality
- Saw a decrease further on in outbreak. Could this be because hospital closed?
- Survivors more likely further on in epidemic - Length of outbreak
Why are some epidemic curves over years instead of days, weeks, or months?
Longer outbreaks are linked to longer incubation periods
Ex. BSE (Mad cow)
Parts of epidemic curve
- Exponential
- Saturation and peak
- Declining phase
- What happens next
Exponential stage
- Highly infectious agent with short incubation period produced a steep curve on a relatively small time scale
- From rapid spread of infection among the population
- Indicates exponential or doubling rate
- Rate of this curve highly dependent on the Basic Reproductive Number (R0)
Basic Reproductive Number (R0)
The number of cases that are expected to occur on average in a homogenous population as a result of infection by a single individual, when the population is susceptible at the start of the epidemic before widespread immunity, immunization or other control methods.
Calculating R0
R0= pcD
(probability of infection on contact) x (number of contacts that occur during the infectious period)
Note: rate of contact (number of contacts per unit of time) is the hardest variable to determine
What effects rate of contacts?
- Behaviour
- Transmission route
- Density
- Environment
Effective Reproductive number (Re or Rt)
The number of individuals in a population who can be infected by an infectious individual at any specific time (not during very start of epidemic)
When greater than 1, epidemic increasing. Peak= 1. When less than 1, epidemic is waning