When is Quarantine a Useful Control Strategy for Emerging Infectious Diseases?

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Author(s)
Day, T., Park, A., Madras, N., Gumel, A., & Wu, J.
Publication language
English
Pages
7pp
Date published
18 Jan 2006
Publisher
American Journal of Epidemiology
Type
Articles
Keywords
Disasters, Epidemics & pandemics, Urban

The isolation and treatment of symptomatic individuals, coupled with the quarantining of individuals that have
a high risk of having been infected, constitute two commonly used epidemic control measures. Although isolation is
probably always a desirable public health measure, quarantine is more controversial. Mass quarantine can inflict
significant social, psychological, and economic costs without resulting in the detection of many infected individuals.
The authors use probabilistic models to determine the conditions under which quarantine is expected to be useful.
Results demonstrate that the number of infections averted (per initially infected individual) through the use of quarantine
is expected to be very low provided that isolation is effective, but it increases abruptly and at an accelerating
rate as the effectiveness of isolation diminishes. When isolation is ineffective, the use of quarantine will be most
beneficial when there is significant asymptomatic transmission and if the asymptomatic period is neither very long
nor very short