2019
DOI: 10.2807/1560-7917.es.2019.24.31.1800216
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The use and reporting of airline passenger data for infectious disease modelling: a systematic review

Abstract: Background A variety of airline passenger data sources are used for modelling the international spread of infectious diseases. Questions exist regarding the suitability and validity of these sources. Aim We conducted a systematic review to identify the sources of airline passenger data used for these purposes and to assess validation of the data and reproducibility of the methodology. Methods Articles matching our search criteria and describi… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(13 citation statements)
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References 149 publications
(250 reference statements)
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“…Previous work on network-mediated epidemic often assumes a common framework, that the probability of an imported infection is directly correlated with the number of arriving air passengers [13,21]. However, a simple correlation between imported cases and crude travel statistics is insufficient to explain the transmission pathways [21]. Such an approach does not allow to differentiate imported cases arriving from countries with higher infection risk and transport potential, or if the variance in the number of cases is also mediated by other socioeconomic and anthropogenic factors.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Previous work on network-mediated epidemic often assumes a common framework, that the probability of an imported infection is directly correlated with the number of arriving air passengers [13,21]. However, a simple correlation between imported cases and crude travel statistics is insufficient to explain the transmission pathways [21]. Such an approach does not allow to differentiate imported cases arriving from countries with higher infection risk and transport potential, or if the variance in the number of cases is also mediated by other socioeconomic and anthropogenic factors.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Two reviews, one presented by Findlater and Bogoch (2018) illustrating how rapid movement around the globe facilitate epidemics in different viruses (e.g., Zika, SARS, Dengue) and the other by Desai et al (2019) evidencing the role of forecasting methodologies and the importance of data in outbreak events. Unfortunately, most of the aviation data is not public, having implications in reproducibility and extension of the use of these models in global disasters faced today (Li and Ryerson 2019;Meslé et al 2019).…”
Section: Airports and Air Travel In Pandemic Managementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We consider validation to be done by comparing model predictions to a known outcome or, more weakly, by calibrating a model to a known outcome. Data validation of disease spread models has been discussed in Meslé et al (2018).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%