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Assessment of the potential for international dissemination of Ebola virus via commercial air travel during the 2014 West African outbreak

Assessment of the potential for international dissemination of Ebola virus via commercial air travel during the 2014 West African outbreak
Assessment of the potential for international dissemination of Ebola virus via commercial air travel during the 2014 West African outbreak
Background: The WHO declared the 2014 west African Ebola epidemic a public health emergency of international concern in view of its potential for further international spread. Decision makers worldwide are in need of empirical data to inform and implement emergency response measures. Our aim was to assess the potential for Ebola virus to spread across international borders via commercial air travel and assess the relative efficiency of exit versus entry screening of travellers at commercial airports.

Methods: We analysed International Air Transport Association data for worldwide flight schedules between Sept 1, 2014, and Dec 31, 2014, and historic traveller flight itinerary data from 2013 to describe expected global population movements via commercial air travel out of Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. Coupled with Ebola virus surveillance data, we modelled the expected number of internationally exported Ebola virus infections, the potential effect of air travel restrictions, and the efficiency of airport-based traveller screening at international ports of entry and exit. We deemed individuals initiating travel from any domestic or international airport within these three countries to have possible exposure to Ebola virus. We deemed all other travellers to have no significant risk of exposure to Ebola virus.

Findings: Based on epidemic conditions and international flight restrictions to and from Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone as of Sept 1, 2014 (reductions in passenger seats by 51% for Liberia, 66% for Guinea, and 85% for Sierra Leone), our model projects 2·8 travellers infected with Ebola virus departing the above three countries via commercial flights, on average, every month. 91?547 (64%) of all air travellers departing Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone had expected destinations in low-income and lower-middle-income countries. Screening international travellers departing three airports would enable health assessments of all travellers at highest risk of exposure to Ebola virus infection.

Interpretation: Decision makers must carefully balance the potential harms from travel restrictions imposed on countries that have Ebola virus activity against any potential reductions in risk from Ebola virus importations. Exit screening of travellers at airports in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone would be the most efficient frontier at which to assess the health status of travellers at risk of Ebola virus exposure, however, this intervention might require international support to implement effectively.

Funding: Canadian Institutes of Health Research.
0140-6736
Bogoch, Isaac I.
2f25f533-9b71-483b-8100-17647ba0926b
Creatore, Maria I.
34eb3163-714e-449d-87ae-d00925296023
Cetron, Martin S.
314af1ad-6974-43a5-811d-81c02adf1d53
Brownstein, John S.
eafaa4d0-0c88-42a5-8bf0-ee164671ee34
Pesik, Nicki
3dd7d8db-59e0-40a2-bc5c-7194c16295c9
Miniota, Jennifer
d65eb844-4b45-4a64-9916-7651f2b5f81e
Tam, Theresa
ceca022d-ade3-4745-9c0e-c5f8ecd316eb
Hu, Wei
c3fe0f59-6606-4b92-90b8-e1a2d4a21c20
Nicolucci, Adriano
c7f3fd2c-2569-4f6e-ad13-1de078a5a20b
Ahmed, Saad
94693886-1ba0-48ea-9be8-9ecbe1bbc201
Yoon, James W.
04375e1a-bde8-4125-8cb6-bf0948f0c18e
Berry, Isha
c6ddf906-ce81-4a3e-85a0-68478615bf48
Hay, Simon
085df25d-03f1-4685-b981-e6792f034496
Anema, Aranka
78b272bc-899d-456b-bb90-635cef5a5ef3
Tatem, Andrew J.
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MacFadden, Derek
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German, Matthew
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Khan, Kamran
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Bogoch, Isaac I.
2f25f533-9b71-483b-8100-17647ba0926b
Creatore, Maria I.
34eb3163-714e-449d-87ae-d00925296023
Cetron, Martin S.
314af1ad-6974-43a5-811d-81c02adf1d53
Brownstein, John S.
eafaa4d0-0c88-42a5-8bf0-ee164671ee34
Pesik, Nicki
3dd7d8db-59e0-40a2-bc5c-7194c16295c9
Miniota, Jennifer
d65eb844-4b45-4a64-9916-7651f2b5f81e
Tam, Theresa
ceca022d-ade3-4745-9c0e-c5f8ecd316eb
Hu, Wei
c3fe0f59-6606-4b92-90b8-e1a2d4a21c20
Nicolucci, Adriano
c7f3fd2c-2569-4f6e-ad13-1de078a5a20b
Ahmed, Saad
94693886-1ba0-48ea-9be8-9ecbe1bbc201
Yoon, James W.
04375e1a-bde8-4125-8cb6-bf0948f0c18e
Berry, Isha
c6ddf906-ce81-4a3e-85a0-68478615bf48
Hay, Simon
085df25d-03f1-4685-b981-e6792f034496
Anema, Aranka
78b272bc-899d-456b-bb90-635cef5a5ef3
Tatem, Andrew J.
6c6de104-a5f9-46e0-bb93-a1a7c980513e
MacFadden, Derek
07087cdf-da6c-4d82-9a77-41828fc35e8e
German, Matthew
a6209974-689d-449b-894e-cf9fd1db1fd2
Khan, Kamran
f55abc91-5af0-4175-a845-90e88ab2e45a

Bogoch, Isaac I., Creatore, Maria I., Cetron, Martin S., Brownstein, John S., Pesik, Nicki, Miniota, Jennifer, Tam, Theresa, Hu, Wei, Nicolucci, Adriano, Ahmed, Saad, Yoon, James W., Berry, Isha, Hay, Simon, Anema, Aranka, Tatem, Andrew J., MacFadden, Derek, German, Matthew and Khan, Kamran (2014) Assessment of the potential for international dissemination of Ebola virus via commercial air travel during the 2014 West African outbreak. The Lancet. (doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(14)61828-6).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: The WHO declared the 2014 west African Ebola epidemic a public health emergency of international concern in view of its potential for further international spread. Decision makers worldwide are in need of empirical data to inform and implement emergency response measures. Our aim was to assess the potential for Ebola virus to spread across international borders via commercial air travel and assess the relative efficiency of exit versus entry screening of travellers at commercial airports.

Methods: We analysed International Air Transport Association data for worldwide flight schedules between Sept 1, 2014, and Dec 31, 2014, and historic traveller flight itinerary data from 2013 to describe expected global population movements via commercial air travel out of Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. Coupled with Ebola virus surveillance data, we modelled the expected number of internationally exported Ebola virus infections, the potential effect of air travel restrictions, and the efficiency of airport-based traveller screening at international ports of entry and exit. We deemed individuals initiating travel from any domestic or international airport within these three countries to have possible exposure to Ebola virus. We deemed all other travellers to have no significant risk of exposure to Ebola virus.

Findings: Based on epidemic conditions and international flight restrictions to and from Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone as of Sept 1, 2014 (reductions in passenger seats by 51% for Liberia, 66% for Guinea, and 85% for Sierra Leone), our model projects 2·8 travellers infected with Ebola virus departing the above three countries via commercial flights, on average, every month. 91?547 (64%) of all air travellers departing Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone had expected destinations in low-income and lower-middle-income countries. Screening international travellers departing three airports would enable health assessments of all travellers at highest risk of exposure to Ebola virus infection.

Interpretation: Decision makers must carefully balance the potential harms from travel restrictions imposed on countries that have Ebola virus activity against any potential reductions in risk from Ebola virus importations. Exit screening of travellers at airports in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone would be the most efficient frontier at which to assess the health status of travellers at risk of Ebola virus exposure, however, this intervention might require international support to implement effectively.

Funding: Canadian Institutes of Health Research.

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More information

Published date: 21 October 2014
Organisations: Global Env Change & Earth Observation, WorldPop, Geography & Environment, Population, Health & Wellbeing (PHeW)

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 370327
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/370327
ISSN: 0140-6736
PURE UUID: 5718021f-3159-49f0-94fd-0921047ec303
ORCID for Andrew J. Tatem: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7270-941X

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 28 Oct 2014 13:32
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:43

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Contributors

Author: Isaac I. Bogoch
Author: Maria I. Creatore
Author: Martin S. Cetron
Author: John S. Brownstein
Author: Nicki Pesik
Author: Jennifer Miniota
Author: Theresa Tam
Author: Wei Hu
Author: Adriano Nicolucci
Author: Saad Ahmed
Author: James W. Yoon
Author: Isha Berry
Author: Simon Hay
Author: Aranka Anema
Author: Andrew J. Tatem ORCID iD
Author: Derek MacFadden
Author: Matthew German
Author: Kamran Khan

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