Emerging Infectious Diseases (Mar 2017)

Spatiotemporal Fluctuations and Triggers of Ebola Virus Spillover

  • John Paul Schmidt,
  • Andrew W. Park,
  • Andrew M. Kramer,
  • Barbara A. Han,
  • Laura W. Alexander,
  • John M. Drake

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2303.160101
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 3
pp. 415 – 422

Abstract

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Because the natural reservoir of Ebola virus remains unclear and disease outbreaks in humans have occurred only sporadically over a large region, forecasting when and where Ebola spillovers are most likely to occur constitutes a continuing and urgent public health challenge. We developed a statistical modeling approach that associates 37 human or great ape Ebola spillovers since 1982 with spatiotemporally dynamic covariates including vegetative cover, human population size, and absolute and relative rainfall over 3 decades across sub-Saharan Africa. Our model (area under the curve 0.80 on test data) shows that spillover intensity is highest during transitions between wet and dry seasons; overall, high seasonal intensity occurs over much of tropical Africa; and spillover intensity is greatest at high (>1,000/km2) and very low (<100/km2) human population densities compared with intermediate levels. These results suggest strong seasonality in Ebola spillover from wild reservoirs and indicate particular times and regions for targeted surveillance.

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