Mathematical Biosciences and Engineering (Jun 2023)

Spatial-temporal diffusion model of aggregated infectious diseases based on population life characteristics: a case study of COVID-19

  • Wen Cao,
  • Siqi Zhao,
  • Xiaochong Tong,
  • Haoran Dai,
  • Jiang Sun,
  • Jiaqi Xu ,
  • Gongrun Qiu,
  • Jingwen Zhu,
  • Yuzhen Tian

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3934/mbe.2023583
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 7
pp. 13086 – 13112

Abstract

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Outbreaks of infectious diseases pose significant threats to human life, and countries around the world need to implement more precise prevention and control measures to contain the spread of viruses. In this study, we propose a spatial-temporal diffusion model of infectious diseases under a discrete grid, based on the time series prediction of infectious diseases, to model the diffusion process of viruses in population. This model uses the estimated outbreak origin as the center of transmission, employing a tree-like structure of daily human travel to generalize the process of viral spread within the population. By incorporating diverse data, it simulates the congregation of people, thus quantifying the flow weights between grids for population movement. The model is validated with some Chinese cities with COVID-19 outbreaks, and the results show that the outbreak point estimation method could better estimate the virus transmission center of the epidemic. The estimated location of the outbreak point in Xi'an was only 0.965 km different from the actual one, and the results were more satisfactory. The spatiotemporal diffusion model for infectious diseases simulates daily newly infected areas, which effectively cover the actual patient infection zones on the same day. During the mid-stage of viral transmission, the coverage rate can increase to over 90%, compared to related research, this method has improved simulation accuracy by approximately 18%. This study can provide technical support for epidemic prevention and control, and assist decision-makers in developing more scientific and efficient epidemic prevention and control policies.

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