TB Research

Usando dados do histórico de localização de telefones celulares de pacientes infecciosos para vigilância de doenças

Jeevan Giddaluru

Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations (Universidade de São Paulo) · 2023-12

Abstract

Infectious diseases significantly contribute to global morbidity and mortality, highlighting the critical need for robust disease surveillance systems. The rapid and accurate identification of infection hotspots is crucial for effective disease control and eliminating vector reservoirs. Traditional methods, reliant on patient-reported data, are vague, slow, and non-integrative, presenting substantial barriers to fully understanding the underlying causes of infection transmission. The widespread usage of smartphones presents a unique opportunity to access, analyze, and monitor digital data. Particularly, location data can offer potential insights into infectious disease dynamics, which has remained largely unexplored. Firstly, the present study leverages location history data from smartphones of malaria patients in Manaus, Amazonas region, to pinpoint mosquito-breeding sites. Upon quantifying the location data, the primary transmission hotspots were identified to be concentrated on the outskirts of the city of Manaus. Additionally, the quantification and hotspot validation confirmed that newly visited locations during the exposure period were potential sources of infection transmission. Secondly, the current study also employs a novel digital contact investigation method for a human-to-human transmission infection such as tuberculosis to measure the exposure risk between the active index cases and their close contacts. The digital contact investigation revealed varied exposure durations between the recruited paired index and close contact participants based on the outcome of close contact. To summarize, the present study determines distinct mobility patterns associated with both these infectious diseases, potentially aiding in drafting targeted public health strategies and policies for digital epidemiological surveillance.

MeSH terms

  • Medicine
  • Tuberculosis
  • Public health
  • Infectious disease (medical specialty)
  • Malaria
  • Disease
  • Epidemiology
  • Transmission (telecommunications)
  • Contact tracing
  • Data collection
  • Environmental health
  • Public health surveillance
  • Disease control
  • Spatial epidemiology
  • Geography