News Release

Travel duration and disease transmission

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Researchers examined mobile phone calling records of approximately 2.5 million subscribers to determine mobility through districts in Namibia from 2010 to 2014 and found that in travels to a high-density district, trip duration was typically less than 1 week long, but duration increased when the destination was a low-density district; including trip duration into pathogen transmission models resulted in delayed timing of spatial spread, and incorporating trip duration into such models can improve assessment of disease spread in low-populated routes, according to the authors.

Article #19-22663: "The duration of travel impacts the spatial dynamics of infectious diseases," by John R. Giles et al.

MEDIA CONTACT: John R. Giles, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD; e-mail: gilesjohnr@gmail.com

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