Inferring who-infected-whom-where in the 2016 Zika outbreak in Singapore-a spatio-temporal model.
Prem, Kiesha;
Lau, Max SY;
Tam, Clarence C;
Ho, Marc ZJ;
Ng, Lee-Ching;
Cook, Alex R;
(2019)
Inferring who-infected-whom-where in the 2016 Zika outbreak in Singapore-a spatio-temporal model.
Journal of the Royal Society, Interface, 16 (155).
20180604-.
ISSN 1742-5689
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2018.0604
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Singapore experienced its first known Zika outbreak in 2016. Given the lack of herd immunity, the suitability of the climate for pathogen transmission, and the year-round presence of the vector- Aedes aegypti-Zika had the potential to become endemic, like dengue. Guillain-Barré syndrome and microcephaly are severe complications associated elsewhere with Zika and the risk of these complications makes understanding its spread imperative. We investigated the spatio-temporal spread of locally transmitted Zika in Singapore and assessed the relevance of non-residential transmission of Zika virus infections, by inferring the possible infection tree (i.e. who-infected-whom-where) and comparing inferences using geographically resolved data on cases' home, their work, or their home and work. We developed a spatio-temporal model using time of onset and both addresses of the Zika-confirmed cases between July and September 2016 to estimate the infection tree using Bayesian data augmentation. Workplaces were involved in a considerable fraction (64.2%) of infections, and homes and workplaces may be distant relative to the scale of transmission, allowing ambulant infected persons may act as the 'vector' infecting distant parts of the country. Contact tracing is a challenge for mosquito-borne diseases, but inferring the geographically structured transmission tree sheds light on the spatial transmission of Zika to immunologically naive regions of the country.