Modeling the airborne infection risk of tuberculosis for a research facility in eMalahleni, South Africa

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Authors

Kusel, R.R. (Ralf)
Craig, Ian Keith
Stoltz, Anton Carel

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley

Abstract

A detailed mathematical modeling framework for the risk of airborne infectious disease transmission in indoor spaces was developed to enable mathematical analysis of experiments conducted at the Airborne Infections Research (AIR) facility, eMalahleni, South Africa. A model was built using this framework to explore possible causes of why an experiment at the AIR facility did not produce expected results. The experiment was conducted at the AIR facility from August 31, 2015 to December 4, 2015, in which the efficacy of upper room germicidal ultraviolet (GUV) irradiation as an environmental control was tested. However, the experiment did not produce the expected outcome of having fewer infections in the test animal room than the control room. The simulation results indicate that dynamic effects, caused by switching the GUV lights, power outages, or introduction of new patients, did not result in the unexpected outcomes. However, a sensitivity analysis highlights that significant uncertainty exists with risk of transmission predictions based on current measurement practices, due to the reliance on large viable literature ranges for parameters.

Description

Keywords

Airborne infections research (AIR), Germicidal ultraviolet (GUV), Airborne infectious disease transmission, Biological system modeling, Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB), Parameter extraction, Sensitivity analysis, Risk of transmission, Research facilities, Measurement practices, Mathematical analysis, Infectious disease, Environmental control, Uncertainty analysis, Risk assessment, Outages, Environmental management, Diseases

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Küsel, R.R., Craig, I.K. & Stoltz, A.C. 2019, 'Modeling the airborne infection risk of tuberculosis for a research facility in eMalahleni, South Africa', Risk Analysis, vol. 39, no. 3, pp. 630-646.