• Bmc Med · Oct 2018

    Editorial

    Spatial infectious disease epidemiology: on the cusp.

    • G Chowell and R Rothenberg.
    • Department of Population Health Sciences, School of Public Health, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA, USA. gchowell@gsu.edu.
    • Bmc Med. 2018 Oct 18; 16 (1): 192192.

    AbstractInfectious diseases continue to pose a significant public health burden despite the great progress achieved in their prevention and control over the last few decades. Our ability to disentangle the factors and mechanisms driving their propagation in space and time has dramatically advanced in recent years. The current era is rich in mathematical and computational tools and detailed geospatial information, including sociodemographic, geographic, and environmental data, which are essential to elucidate key drivers of infectious disease transmission from epidemiological and genetic data. Indeed, this paradigm shift was driven by dramatic advances in complex systems approaches along with substantial improvements in data availability and computational power. The burgeoning output of infectious disease spatial modeling suggests that we are close to a fully integrated approach for early epidemic detection and intervention. This special collection in BMC Medicine aims to bring together a broad range of quantitative investigations that improve our understanding of the spatiotemporal transmission dynamics of infectious diseases in order to mitigate their impact on the human population.

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