2007
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0001284
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Early Detection of Tuberculosis Outbreaks among the San Francisco Homeless: Trade-Offs Between Spatial Resolution and Temporal Scale

Abstract: BackgroundSan Francisco has the highest rate of tuberculosis (TB) in the U.S. with recurrent outbreaks among the homeless and marginally housed. It has been shown for syndromic data that when exact geographic coordinates of individual patients are used as the spatial base for outbreak detection, higher detection rates and accuracy are achieved compared to when data are aggregated into administrative regions such as zip codes and census tracts. We examine the effect of varying the spatial resolution in the TB d… Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…The method had been widely used to detect clusters of infectious disease and may serve as a useful adjunct to disease surveillance, particularly in areas of limited resources, e.g., malaria [34], dengue [35], Japanese encephalitis [36], tuberculosis [37] and HFMD [32], etc. However, the Scan statistics are based on the assumption of circular spatial scanning windows and space-time cylinders to detect clusters, while the actual shapes of clusters were not all like that.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The method had been widely used to detect clusters of infectious disease and may serve as a useful adjunct to disease surveillance, particularly in areas of limited resources, e.g., malaria [34], dengue [35], Japanese encephalitis [36], tuberculosis [37] and HFMD [32], etc. However, the Scan statistics are based on the assumption of circular spatial scanning windows and space-time cylinders to detect clusters, while the actual shapes of clusters were not all like that.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…census tract or ZIP code) since information on population density is often available only at these gross administrative levels. However, such aggregated analyses will result in a lower sensitivity for detecting TB outbreaks than analyses using individual-level data [22, 23]. Since our approach used comparisons of MDR and non-MDR cases arising from the same base population, our analysis is not compromised by non-uniform population density and thus we were able to utilize the highest possible level of resolution (i.e.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Scan statistics were widely applied in study topic related to TB [39][40][41][42][43], whereas, data aggregated into large scales of administrative regions may ignore the disease variation in small size of population, information lose lead to inaccurate and insensitive conclusion [44], these national-level researches could not preciously detect localized cluster on the resolution of province or prefecture [9,10,45]. Meanwhile, due to the stochastic scan statistics sensitive to parameters, the analytical results on high-resolution scan of county-level may not stable.…”
Section: Correlation and Hierarchical Clustering Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%