“…Examples of where genetic data has already informed public health policy include a study on Ascaris in pigs and humans in Guatemala, where even though infections were sympatric, there appeared to be, using the molecular tools available at the time, little gene flow between the parasite populations indicating no transmission between the two host species (Anderson et al, 1993). Conversely two other more recent studies have indicated cross transmission between the Ascaris lumbricoides and A. suum species, with, furthermore, up to 4% and 7% of Ascaris appearing as hybrids, which raises a number of potential implications for long-term evolutionary dynamics (Criscione et al, 2007). Models have already been used in directly transmitted pathogens, including sexually transmitted diseases, where contact tracing data may not be complete, but where genome data can inform on infection networks (e.g.…”