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Spatiotemporal Transmission Model to Simulate an Interregional Epidemic Spreading

Author

Listed:
  • Zitong Li
  • Haiping Zhang
  • Ding Chen
  • Canyu Chen
  • Renyu Chen
  • Nuozhou Shen
  • Yi Huang
  • Liyang Xiong
  • Guoan Tang

Abstract

Infectious disease spread is a spatiotemporal process with significant regional differences that can be affected by multiple factors, such as human mobility and manner of contact. From a geographical perspective, the simulation and analysis of an epidemic can promote an understanding of the contagion mechanism and lead to an accurate prediction of its future trends. The existing methods fail to consider the mutual feedback mechanism of heterogeneities between the interregional population interaction and the regional transmission conditions (e.g., contact probability and the effective reproduction number). This disadvantage oversimplifies the transmission process and reduces the accuracy of the simulation results. To fill this gap, a general model considering the spatiotemporal characteristics is proposed, which includes compartment modeling of population categories, flow interaction modeling of population movements, and spatial spread modeling of an infectious disease. Furthermore, the correctness of a theoretical hypothesis for modeling and prediction accuracy of this model was tested with a synthetic data set and a real-world COVID-19 data set in China, respectively. The theoretical contribution of this article was to verify that the interplay of multiple types of geospatial heterogeneities dramatically influences the spatial spread of infectious disease. This model provides an effective method for solving infectious disease simulation problems involving dynamic, complex spatiotemporal processes of geographical elements, such as optimization of lockdown strategies, analyses of the medical resource carrying capacity, and risk assessment of herd immunity from the perspective of geography. Key Words: geospatial heterogeneities, health geography, interregional population interaction, spatiotemporal analysis, transmission modeling.

Suggested Citation

  • Zitong Li & Haiping Zhang & Ding Chen & Canyu Chen & Renyu Chen & Nuozhou Shen & Yi Huang & Liyang Xiong & Guoan Tang, 2023. "Spatiotemporal Transmission Model to Simulate an Interregional Epidemic Spreading," Annals of the American Association of Geographers, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 113(9), pages 2084-2107, October.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:raagxx:v:113:y:2023:i:9:p:2084-2107
    DOI: 10.1080/24694452.2023.2216296
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