Author: Miles D. Miller-Dickson; Victor A. Meszaros; Francis Baffour-Awuah; Salvador Almagro-Moreno; C. Brandon Ogbunugafor
Title: Waterborne, abiotic and other indirectly transmitted (W.A.I.T.) infections are defined by the dynamics of free-living pathogens and environmental reservoirs Document date: 2019_1_20
ID: d9mxtc8d_65
Snippet: In the context of cholera, modeling the aquatic reservoir allows us to interrogate the interplay between several notable aspects of cholera epidemics. For example, the interaction between the relative size of the body of water and changes in infected populations, and the notion that the symptomatic and asymptomatic infectious populations fuel different aspects of the epidemic (initial and longer-term phase, respectively). These are areas of prese.....
Document: In the context of cholera, modeling the aquatic reservoir allows us to interrogate the interplay between several notable aspects of cholera epidemics. For example, the interaction between the relative size of the body of water and changes in infected populations, and the notion that the symptomatic and asymptomatic infectious populations fuel different aspects of the epidemic (initial and longer-term phase, respectively). These are areas of present and future inquiry.
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