Onset of a pandemic: characterizing the initial phase of the swine flu (H1N1) epidemic in Israel
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 14:31authored byUri Roll, Rami Yaari, Guy Katriel, Oren Barnea, Lewi StoneLewi Stone, Ella Mendelson, Michal Mandelboim, Amit Huppert
The swine influenza H1N1 first identified in Mexico, spread rapidly across the globe and is considered the fastest moving pandemic in history. The early phase of an outbreak, in which data is relatively scarce, presents scientific challenges on key issues such as: scale, severity and immunity which are fundamental for establishing sound and rapid policy schemes. Our analysis of an Israeli dataset aims at understanding the spatio-temporal dynamics of H1N1 in its initial phase.Methods: We constructed and analyzed a unique dataset from Israel on all confirmed cases (between April 26 to July 7, 2009), representing most swine flu cases in this period. We estimated and characterized fundamental epidemiological features of the pandemic in Israel (e.g. effective reproductive number, age-class distribution, at-risk social groups, infections between sexes, and spatial dynamics). Contact data collected during this stage was used to estimate the generation time distribution of the pandemic.