David L Smith

David L Smith

University of Washington

H-index: 111

North America-United States

About David L Smith

David L Smith, With an exceptional h-index of 111 and a recent h-index of 84 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at University of Washington, specializes in the field of health metrics, infectious disease dynamics, malaria, mathematical epidemiology.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Spatial Dynamics of Malaria Transmission

MGSurvE: A framework to optimize trap placement for genetic surveillance of mosquito population.

House design and risk of malaria, acute respiratory infection and gastrointestinal illness in Uganda: A cohort study

Simulating the Impacts of Augmenting Intensive Vector Control with Mass Drug Administration or Test-and-Treat Strategies on the Malaria Infectious Reservoir.

Estimating the malaria attributable fraction of fever in cohort studies through a before and after comparison of impact: Nagongera, Tororo, Uganda, 2011-2019

Pre-existing partner-drug resistance to artemisinin combination therapies facilitates the emergence and spread of artemisinin resistance: a consensus modelling study

Current dichotomous metrics obscure trends in severe and extreme child growth failure

The overlapping burden of the three leading causes of disability and death in sub-Saharan African children

David L Smith Information

University

University of Washington

Position

Professor Dept. of Health Metrics Sciences School of Medicine

Citations(all)

72411

Citations(since 2020)

48342

Cited By

43033

hIndex(all)

111

hIndex(since 2020)

84

i10Index(all)

234

i10Index(since 2020)

207

Email

University Profile Page

University of Washington

David L Smith Skills & Research Interests

health metrics

infectious disease dynamics

malaria

mathematical epidemiology

Top articles of David L Smith

Spatial Dynamics of Malaria Transmission

Authors

Sean L Wu,John M Henry,Daniel T Citron,Doreen Mbabazi Ssebuliba,Juliet Nakakawa Nsumba,Oliver J Brady,Carlos A Guerra,Guillermo A García,Austin R Carter,Heather M Ferguson,Bakare Emmanuel Afolabi,Simon I Hay,Robert C Reiner,Samson Kiware,David L Smith

Journal

PLoS Computational Biology

Published Date

2023/6/12

The Ross-Macdonald model has exerted enormous influence over the study of malaria transmission dynamics and control, but it lacked features to describe parasite dispersal, travel, and other important aspects of heterogeneous transmission. Here, we present a patch-based differential equation modeling framework that extends the Ross-Macdonald model with sufficient skill and complexity to support planning, monitoring and evaluation for Plasmodium falciparum malaria control. We designed a generic interface for building structured, spatial models of malaria transmission based on a new algorithm for mosquito blood feeding. We developed new algorithms to simulate adult mosquito demography, dispersal, and egg laying in response to resource availability. The core dynamical components describing mosquito ecology and malaria transmission were decomposed, redesigned and reassembled into a modular framework. Structural elements in the framework—human population strata, patches, and aquatic habitats—interact through a flexible design that facilitates construction of ensembles of models with scalable complexity to support robust analytics for malaria policy and adaptive malaria control. We propose updated definitions for the human biting rate and entomological inoculation rates. We present new formulas to describe parasite dispersal and spatial dynamics under steady state conditions, including the human biting rates, parasite dispersal, the “vectorial capacity matrix,” a human transmitting capacity distribution matrix, and threshold conditions. An R package that implements the framework, solves the differential equations, and …

MGSurvE: A framework to optimize trap placement for genetic surveillance of mosquito population.

Authors

C HM Sánchez,DL Smith,JM Marshall

Journal

Biorxiv: the Preprint Server for Biology

Published Date

2023/6/27

Genetic surveillance of mosquito populations is becoming increasingly relevant as genetics-based mosquito control strategies advance from laboratory to field testing. Especially applicable are mosquito gene drive projects, the potential scale of which leads monitoring to be a significant cost driver. For these projects, monitoring will be required to detect unintended spread of gene drive mosquitoes beyond field sites, and the emergence of alternative alleles, such as drive-resistant alleles or non-functional effector genes, within intervention sites. This entails the need to distribute mosquito traps efficiently such that an allele of interest is detected as quickly as possible-ideally when remediation is still viable. Additionally, insecticide-based tools such as bednets are compromised by insecticide-resistance alleles for which there is also a need to detect as quickly as possible. To this end, we present MGSurvE (Mosquito Gene SurveillancE): a computational framework that optimizes trap placement for genetic surveillance of mosquito populations such that the time to detection of an allele of interest is minimized. A key strength of MGSurvE is that it allows important biological features of mosquitoes and the landscapes they inhabit to be accounted for, namely: i) resources required by mosquitoes (eg, food sources and aquatic breeding sites) can be explicitly distributed through a landscape, ii) movement of mosquitoes may depend on their sex, the current state of their gonotrophic cycle (if female) and resource attractiveness, and iii) traps may differ in their attractiveness profile. Example MGSurvE analyses are presented to demonstrate optimal trap …

House design and risk of malaria, acute respiratory infection and gastrointestinal illness in Uganda: A cohort study

Authors

Alex K Musiime,Paul J Krezanoski,David L Smith,Maxwell Kilama,Melissa D Conrad,Geoffrey Otto,Patrick Kyagamba,Jackson Asiimwe,John Rek,Joaniter I Nankabirwa,Emmanuel Arinaitwe,Anne M Akol,Moses R Kamya,Sarah G Staedke,Chris Drakeley,Teun Bousema,Steve W Lindsay,Grant Dorsey,Lucy S Tusting

Journal

PLOS Global Public Health

Published Date

2022/3/3

House construction is rapidly modernizing across Africa but the potential benefits for human health are poorly understood. We hypothesised that improvements to housing would be associated with reductions in malaria, acute respiratory infection (ARI) and gastrointestinal illness in an area of low malaria endemicity in Uganda. Data were analysed from a cohort study of male and female child and adult residents (n = 531) of 80 randomly-selected households in Nagongera sub-county, followed for 24 months (October 4, 2017 to October 31, 2019). Houses were classified as modern (brick walls, metal roof and closed eaves) or traditional (all other homes). Light trap collections of mosquitoes were done every two weeks in all sleeping rooms. Every four weeks, we measured malaria infection (using microscopy and qPCR to detect malaria parasites), incidence of malaria, ARI and gastrointestinal illness. We collected 15,780 adult female Anopheles over 7,631 nights. We collected 13,277 blood samples of which 10.2% (1,347) were positive for malaria parasites. Over 958 person years we diagnosed 38 episodes of uncomplicated malaria (incidence 0.04 episodes per person-year at risk), 2,553 episodes of ARI (incidence 2.7 episodes per person-year) and 387 episodes of gastrointestinal illness (incidence 0.4 episodes per person-year). Modern houses were associated with a 53% lower human biting rate compared to traditional houses (adjusted incidence rate ratio [aIRR] 0.47, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.32–0.67, p<0.001) and a 24% lower incidence of gastrointestinal illness (aIRR 0.76, 95% CI 0.59–0.98, p = 0.04) but no changes in malaria …

Simulating the Impacts of Augmenting Intensive Vector Control with Mass Drug Administration or Test-and-Treat Strategies on the Malaria Infectious Reservoir.

Authors

Joaniter I Nankabirwa,Emmanuel Arinaitwe,Jessica Briggs,John Rek,Philip J Rosenthal,Moses R Kamya,Peter Olwoch,David L Smith,Isabel Rodriguez-Barraquer,Grant Dorsey,Bryan Greenhouse

Journal

The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene

Published Date

2022/10/3

Highly effective vector control can reduce malaria burden significantly, but individuals with parasitemia provide a potential reservoir for onward transmission. We performed an empirical, non-parametric simulation based on cohort data from Tororo District, Uganda—an area with historically high but recently reduced malaria transmission—to estimate the effects of mass drug administration (MDA) and test-and-treat on parasite prevalence. We estimate that a single round of MDA would have accelerated declines in parasite prevalence dramatically over 2 years (cumulative parasite prevalence ratio [PPR], 0.34). This decline was mostly during the first year of administration (PPR, 0.23) and waned by 23 months (PPR, 0.74). Test-and-treat using a highly sensitive diagnostic had nearly the same effect as MDA at 1 year (PPR, 0.27) and required many fewer treatments. The impact of test-and-treat using a standard …

Estimating the malaria attributable fraction of fever in cohort studies through a before and after comparison of impact: Nagongera, Tororo, Uganda, 2011-2019

Authors

John Rek,David Galick,Emily R Hilton,John M Henry,Austin R Carter,Joaniter I Nankabirwa,Emmanuel Arinaitwe,Maato Zedi,Paul Krezanoski,Isabel Rodriguez-Barraquer,Bryan Greenhouse,Robert C Reiner,Simon I Hay,Moses R Kamya,Grant Dorsey,Jimmy Opigo,David L Smith

Journal

medRxiv

Published Date

2022/12/31

AbstractBackgroundMalaria is an important cause of fever across much of sub-Saharan Africa and other places where Plasmodium falciparum infection is highly prevalent. Here, we estimate the fraction of fever that is attributable to malaria using data from two studies in Nagongera, Tororo, Uganda that followed cohorts of children and adults longitudinally from 2011-2019. The study included three years before and five years after indoor residual spraying (IRS) sharply reduced mosquito populations, malaria exposure, and the prevalence of malaria infection.MethodsWe estimate the malaria attributable fraction of fever (MAFF) by directly quantifying and comparing fever before and after IRS started. We compared subjective (i.e., self-reported) and objective fever during scheduled and unscheduled visits (i.e., to seek care) in young children (under 5 years old), older children (aged 5-10 years), and adults (over 18 years old).ResultsWe estimated that there were 78-90 total days per person, per year (pppy) with subjective fever during the pre-IRS baseline in young children; 52-58 in older children; and 38-46 days in adults. After IRS, sub-clinical fever declined to 5-6 days pppy with fever in young children to around 3 in older children, and around 1 in adults: a 94% reduction in young children, 95% in older children, and 99% in adults. Reductions in total fever prevalence for care seeking (during unscheduled visits) declined by around 50% in young children, 65% in older children, and 80% in adults. In the before vs. after comparison, malaria accounted for 88% of objective fever during scheduled visits in young children, 75% in older children, and 91% in …

Pre-existing partner-drug resistance to artemisinin combination therapies facilitates the emergence and spread of artemisinin resistance: a consensus modelling study

Authors

Oliver J Watson,Bo Gao,Tran Dang Nguyen,Thu Nguyen-Anh Tran,Melissa A Penny,David L Smith,Lucy Okell,Ricardo Aguas,Maciej F Boni

Journal

The Lancet Microbe

Published Date

2022/9/1

BackgroundArtemisinin-resistant genotypes of Plasmodium falciparum have now emerged a minimum of six times on three continents despite recommendations that all artemisinins be deployed as artemisinin combination therapies (ACTs). Widespread resistance to the non-artemisinin partner drugs in ACTs has the potential to limit the clinical and resistance benefits provided by combination therapy. We aimed to model and evaluate the long-term effects of high levels of partner-drug resistance on the early emergence of artemisinin-resistant genotypes.MethodsUsing a consensus modelling approach, we used three individual-based mathematical models of Plasmodium falciparum transmission to evaluate the effects of pre-existing partner-drug resistance and ACT deployment on the evolution of artemisinin resistance. Each model simulates 100 000 individuals in a particular transmission setting (malaria …

Current dichotomous metrics obscure trends in severe and extreme child growth failure

Authors

Ryan Fitzgerald,Helena Manguerra,Michael B Arndt,William M Gardner,Ya-Yin Chang,Bethany Zigler,Heather Jean Taylor,Kelly Bienhoff,David L Smith,Christopher JL Murray,Simon I Hay,Robert C Reiner Jr,Nicholas J Kassebaum

Journal

Science Advances

Published Date

2022/5/20

Historically, the prevalence of child growth failure (CGF) has been tracked dichotomously as the proportion of children more than 2 SDs below the median of the World Health Organization growth standards. However, this conventional “thresholding” approach fails to recognize child growth as a spectrum and obscures trends in populations with the highest rates of CGF. Our analysis presents the first ever estimates of entire distributions of HAZ, WHZ, and WAZ for each of 204 countries and territories from 1990 to 2020 for children less than 5 years old by age group and sex. This approach reflects the continuous nature of CGF, allows us to more comprehensively assess shrinking or widening disparities over time, and reveals otherwise hidden trends that disproportionately affect the most vulnerable populations.

The overlapping burden of the three leading causes of disability and death in sub-Saharan African children

Authors

Robert C Reiner Jr,Simon I Hay

Journal

Nature communications

Published Date

2022/12/6

Despite substantial declines since 2000, lower respiratory infections (LRIs), diarrhoeal diseases, and malaria remain among the leading causes of nonfatal and fatal disease burden for children under 5 years of age (under 5), primarily in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). The spatial burden of each of these diseases has been estimated subnationally across SSA, yet no prior analyses have examined the pattern of their combined burden. Here we synthesise subnational estimates of the burden of LRIs, diarrhoea, and malaria in children under-5 from 2000 to 2017 for 43 sub-Saharan countries. Some units faced a relatively equal burden from each of the three diseases, while others had one or two dominant sources of unit-level burden, with no consistent pattern geographically across the entire subcontinent. Using a subnational counterfactual analysis, we show that nearly 300 million DALYs could have been averted since …

Real-time, spatial decision support to optimize malaria vector control: The case of indoor residual spraying on Bioko Island, Equatorial Guinea

Authors

Guillermo A García,Brent Atkinson,Olivier Tresor Donfack,Emily R Hilton,Jordan M Smith,Jeremías Nzamío Mba Eyono,Marcos Mbulito Iyanga,Liberato Motobe Vaz,Restituto Mba Nguema Avue,John Pollock,Josea Ratsirarson,Edward M Aldrich,Wonder P Phiri,David L Smith,Christopher Schwabe,Carlos A Guerra

Journal

PLOS Digital Health

Published Date

2022/5/12

Public health interventions require evidence-based decision-making to maximize impact. Spatial decision support systems (SDSS) are designed to collect, store, process and analyze data to generate knowledge and inform decisions. This paper discusses how the use of a SDSS, the Campaign Information Management System (CIMS), to support malaria control operations on Bioko Island has impacted key process indicators of indoor residual spraying (IRS): coverage, operational efficiency and productivity. We used data from the last five annual IRS rounds (2017 to 2021) to estimate these indicators. IRS coverage was calculated as the percentage of houses sprayed per unit area, represented by 100x100 m map-sectors. Optimal coverage was defined as between 80% and 85%, and under and overspraying as coverage below 80% and above 85%, respectively. Operational efficiency was defined as the fraction of map-sectors that achieved optimal coverage. Daily productivity was expressed as the number of houses sprayed per sprayer per day (h/s/d). These indicators were compared across the five rounds. Overall IRS coverage (i.e. percent of total houses sprayed against the overall denominator by round) was highest in 2017 (80.2%), yet this round showed the largest proportion of oversprayed map-sectors (36.0%). Conversely, despite producing a lower overall coverage (77.5%), the 2021 round showed the highest operational efficiency (37.7%) and the lowest proportion of oversprayed map-sectors (18.7%). In 2021, higher operational efficiency was also accompanied by marginally higher productivity. Productivity ranged from 3.3 h/s/d in …

How long is the last mile? Evaluating successful malaria elimination trajectories

Authors

Justin M Cohen,Deepika Kandula,David L Smith,Arnaud Le Menach

Journal

Malaria Journal

Published Date

2022/11/14

BackgroundMany national malaria programmes have set goals of eliminating malaria, but realistic timelines for achieving this goal remain unclear. In this investigation, historical data are collated on countries that successfully eliminated malaria to assess how long elimination has taken in the past, and thus to inform feasible timelines for achieving it in the future.MethodsAnnual malaria case series were sought for 56 successful elimination programmes through a non-systematic review. Up to 40 years of annual case counts were compiled leading up to the first year in which zero locally acquired or indigenous cases were reported. To separate the period over which effective elimination efforts occurred from prior background trends, annual case totals were log transformed, and their slopes evaluated for a breakpoint in linear trend using the segmented package in R. The number of years from the breakpoint to the first …

Infection age as a predictor of epidemiological metrics for malaria

Authors

John M Henry,Austin Carter,David L Smith

Journal

Malaria Journal

Published Date

2022/4/7

BackgroundAccurate estimation of the burden of Plasmodium falciparum is essential for strategic planning for control and elimination. Due in part to the extreme heterogeneity in malaria exposure, immunity, other causes of disease, direct measurements of fever and disease attributable to malaria can be difficult. This can make a comparison of epidemiological metrics both within and between populations hard to interpret. An essential part of untangling this is an understanding of the complex time-course of malaria infections.MethodsHistoric data from malariatherapy infections, in which individuals were intentionally infected with malaria parasites, were reexamined in aggregate. In this analysis, the age of each infection was examined as a potential predictor describing aggregate patterns across all infections. A series of piecewise linear and generalized linear regressions were performed to highlight the infection age …

East Africa International Center of Excellence for Malaria Research: Summary of Key Research Findings

Authors

Joaniter I Nankabirwa,John Rek,Emmanuel Arinaitwe,Jane Frances Namuganga,Sam L Nsobya,Victor Asua,Henry D Mawejje,Adrienne Epstein,Bryan Greenhouse,Isabel Rodriguez-Barraquer,Jessica Briggs,Paul J Krezanoski,Philip J Rosenthal,Melissa Conrad,David Smith,Sarah G Staedke,Chris Drakeley,Teun Bousema,Chiara Andolina,Martin Donnelly,Moses R Kamya,Grant Dorsey

Journal

American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene

Published Date

2022/10/11

The Program for Resistance, Immunology, Surveillance, and Modeling of Malaria (PRISM) has been conducting malaria research in Uganda since 2010 to improve the understanding of the disease and measure the impact of population-level control interventions in the country. Here, we will summarize key research findings from a series of studies addressing routine health facility-based surveillance, comprehensive cohort studies, studies of the molecular epidemiology, and transmission of malaria, evaluation of antimalarial drug efficacy, and resistance across the country, and assessments of insecticide resistance. Among our key findings are the following. First, we found that in historically high transmission areas of Uganda, a combination of universal distribution of long-lasting insecticidal-treated nets (LLINs) and sustained indoor residual spraying (IRS) of insecticides lowered the malaria burden greatly, but …

Within‐household clustering of genetically related Plasmodium falciparum infections in a moderate transmission area of Uganda

Authors

Jessica Briggs,Alison Kuchta,Max Murphy,Sofonias Tessema,Emmanuel Arinaitwe,John Rek,Anna Chen,Joaniter I Nankabirwa,Chris Drakeley,David Smith,Teun Bousema,Moses Kamya,Isabel Rodriguez-Barraquer,Sarah Staedke,Grant Dorsey,Philip J Rosenthal,Bryan Greenhouse

Journal

Malaria Journal

Published Date

2021/2/2

Background Evaluation of genetic relatedness of malaria parasites is a useful tool for understanding transmission patterns, but patterns are not easily detectable in areas with moderate to high malaria transmission. To evaluate the feasibility of detecting genetic relatedness in a moderate malaria transmission setting, relatedness of Plasmodium falciparum infections was measured in cohort participants from randomly selected households in the Kihihi sub-county of Uganda (annual entomological inoculation rate of 27 infectious bites per person). Methods All infections detected via microscopy or Plasmodium-specific loop mediated isothermal amplification from passive and active case detection during August 2011-March 2012 were genotyped at 26 microsatellite loci, providing data for 349 samples from 230 participants living in 80 households. Pairwise …

Comparing metapopulation dynamics of infectious diseases under different models of human movement

Authors

Daniel T Citron,Carlos A Guerra,Andrew J Dolgert,Sean L Wu,John M Henry,Héctor M Sánchez C,David L Smith

Journal

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Published Date

2021/5/4

Newly available datasets present exciting opportunities to investigate how human population movement contributes to the spread of infectious diseases across large geographical distances. It is now possible to construct realistic models of infectious disease dynamics for the purposes of understanding global-scale epidemics. Nevertheless, a remaining unanswered question is how best to leverage the new data to parameterize models of movement, and whether one’s choice of movement model impacts modeled disease outcomes. We adapt three well-studied models of infectious disease dynamics, the susceptible–infected–recovered model, the susceptible–infected–susceptible model, and the Ross–Macdonald model, to incorporate either of two candidate movement models. We describe the effect that the choice of movement model has on each disease model’s results, finding that in all cases, there are …

Performance of passive case detection for malaria surveillance: results from nine countries in Mesoamerica and the Dominican Republic

Authors

Diego Rios-Zertuche,Keith H Carter,Katie Panhorst Harris,Max Thom,Maria Paola Zúñiga-Brenes,Pedro Bernal-Lara,Álvaro González-Marmol,Casey K Johanns,Bernardo Hernández,Erin Palmisano,Rebecca Cogen,Paulami Naik,Charbel El Bcheraoui,David L Smith,Ali H Mokdad,Emma Iriarte

Journal

Malaria Journal

Published Date

2021/4/30

BackgroundIn malaria elimination settings, available metrics for malaria surveillance have been insufficient to measure the performance of passive case detection adequately. An indicator for malaria suspected cases with malaria test (MSCT) is proposed to measure the rate of testing on persons presenting to health facilities who satisfy the definition of a suspected malaria case. This metric does not rely on prior knowledge of fever prevalence, seasonality, or external denominators, and can be used to compare detection rates in suspected cases within and between countries, including across settings with different levels of transmission.MethodsTo compute the MSCT, an operational definition for suspected malaria cases was established, including clinical and epidemiological criteria. In general, suspected cases included: (1) persons with fever detected in areas with active malaria transmission; (2) persons with fever …

Marked reduction in antibiotic usage following intensive malaria control in a cohort of Ugandan children

Authors

Paul J Krezanoski,Michelle E Roh,John Rek,Joaniter I Nankabirwa,Emmanuel Arinaitwe,Sarah G Staedke,Susan Nayiga,Michelle S Hsiang,David Smith,Moses Kamya,Grant Dorsey

Journal

BMC medicine

Published Date

2021/12

Background Intensive malaria control may have additional benefits beyond reducing the incidence of symptomatic malaria. We compared antibiotic treatment of children before and after the implementation of highly effective malaria control interventions in Tororo, a historically high transmission area of Uganda. Methods Two successive cohorts of children, aged 0.5 to 10 years, were followed from September 2011 to October 2019 in a dedicated study clinic. Universal distribution of long-lasting insecticidal nets was conducted in 2013 and 2017. Sustained indoor residual spraying of insecticide (IRS) was initiated in December 2014. Generalized linear mixed-effects models were used to compare the incidence of antimalarial and antibiotic treatments before and after vector control measures were implemented. Results …

Pre-existing partner-drug resistance facilitates the emergence and spread of artemisinin resistance: a consensus modelling study

Authors

Oliver J Watson,Bo Gao,Tran Dang Nguyen,Thu Nguyen-Anh Tran,Melissa A Penny,David L Smith,Lucy Okell,Ricardo Aguas,Maciej F Boni

Journal

BioRxiv

Published Date

2021/4/10

BackgroundArtemisinin-resistant genotypes have now emerged a minimum of five times on three continents despite recommendations that all artemisinins be deployed as artemisinin combination therapies (ACTs). Widespread resistance to the non-artemisinin partner drugs in ACTs has the potential to limit the clinical and resistance benefits provided by combination therapy.MethodsUsing a consensus modelling approach with three individual-based mathematical models of Plasmodium falciparum transmission, we evaluate the effects of pre-existing partner-drug resistance and ACT deployment on artemisinin resistance evolution. We evaluate settings where dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine (DHA-PPQ), artesunate-amodiaquine (ASAQ), or artemether-lumefantrine (AL) are deployed as first-line therapy. We use time until 0.25 artemisinin resistance allele frequency (the establishment time) as the primary outcome measure.FindingsHigher frequencies of pre-existing partner-drug resistant genotypes lead to earlier establishment of artemisinin resistance. Across all scenarios and pre-existing frequencies of partner-drug resistance explored, a 0.10 increase in partner-drug resistance frequency on average corresponded to 0.7 to 5.0 years loss of artemisinin efficacy. However, the majority of reductions in time to artemisinin establishment were observed after the first increment from 0.0 to 0.10 partner-drug resistance genotype frequency.InterpretationPartner-drug resistance in ACTs facilitates the early emergence of artemisinin resistance and is a major public health concern. Higher grade partner-drug resistance has the largest effect, with piperaquine …

Measuring the accuracy of gridded human population density surfaces: a case study in Bioko Island, Equatorial Guinea

Authors

Brendan Fries,Carlos A Guerra,Guillermo A García,Sean L Wu,Jordan M Smith,Jeremias Nzamio Mba Oyono,Olivier T Donfack,José Osá Osá Nfumu,Simon I Hay,David L Smith,Andrew J Dolgert

Journal

PloS one

Published Date

2021/9/1

Background Geospatial datasets of population are becoming more common in models used for health policy. Publicly-available maps of human population make a consistent picture from inconsistent census data, and the techniques they use to impute data makes each population map unique. Each mapping model explains its methods, but it can be difficult to know which map is appropriate for which policy work. High quality census datasets, where available, are a unique opportunity to characterize maps by comparing them with truth. Methods We use census data from a bed-net mass-distribution campaign on Bioko Island, Equatorial Guinea, conducted by the Bioko Island Malaria Elimination Program as a gold standard to evaluate LandScan (LS), WorldPop Constrained (WP-C) and WorldPop Unconstrained (WP-U), Gridded Population of the World (GPW), and the High-Resolution Settlement Layer (HRSL). Each layer is compared to the gold-standard using statistical measures to evaluate distribution, error, and bias. We investigated how map choice affects burden estimates from a malaria prevalence model. Results Specific population layers were able to match the gold-standard distribution at different population densities. LandScan was able to most accurately capture highly urban distribution, HRSL and WP-C matched best at all other lower population densities. GPW and WP-U performed poorly everywhere. Correctly capturing empty pixels is key, and smaller pixel sizes (100 m vs 1 km) improve this. Normalizing areas based on known district populations increased performance. The use of differing population layers in a malaria model …

Modelling distributions of Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus using climate, host density and interspecies competition

Authors

Bingyi Yang,Brooke A Borgert,Barry W Alto,Carl K Boohene,Joe Brew,Kelly Deutsch,James T DeValerio,Rhoel R Dinglasan,Daniel Dixon,Joseph M Faella,Sandra L Fisher-Grainger,Gregory E Glass,Reginald Hayes Jr,David F Hoel,Austin Horton,Agne Janusauskaite,Bill Kellner,Moritz UG Kraemer,Keira J Lucas,Johana Medina,Rachel Morreale,William Petrie,Robert C Reiner Jr,Michael T Riles,Henrik Salje,David L Smith,John P Smith,Amy Solis,Jason Stuck,Chalmers Vasquez,Katie F Williams,Rui-De Xue,Derek AT Cummings

Journal

PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases

Published Date

2021/3/25

Florida faces the challenge of repeated introduction and autochthonous transmission of arboviruses transmitted by Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus. Empirically-based predictive models of the spatial distribution of these species would aid surveillance and vector control efforts. To predict the occurrence and abundance of these species, we fit a mixed-effects zero-inflated negative binomial regression to a mosquito surveillance dataset with records from more than 200,000 trap days, representative of 53% of the land area and ranging from 2004 to 2018 in Florida. We found an asymmetrical competitive interaction between adult populations of Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus for the sampled sites. Wind speed was negatively associated with the occurrence and abundance of both vectors. Our model predictions show high accuracy (72.9% to 94.5%) in validation tests leaving out a random 10% subset of sites and data since 2017, suggesting a potential for predicting the distribution of the two Aedes vectors.

Quantifying malaria acquired during travel and its role in malaria elimination on Bioko Island

Authors

Daniel T Citron,Carlos A Guerra,Guillermo A García,Wu Sean L,Katherine E Battle,Harry S Gibson,David L Smith

Journal

Malaria Journal

Published Date

2021/8/31

Background Malaria elimination is the goal for Bioko Island, Equatorial Guinea. Intensive interventions implemented since 2004 have reduced prevalence, but progress has stalled in recent years. A challenge for elimination has been malaria infections in residents acquired during travel to mainland Equatorial Guinea. The present article quantifies how off-island contributes to remaining malaria prevalence on Bioko Island, and investigates the potential role of a pre-erythrocytic vaccine in making further progress towards elimination. Methods Malaria transmission on Bioko Island was simulated using a model calibrated based on data from the Malaria Indicator Surveys (MIS) from 2015 to 2018, including detailed travel histories and malaria positivity by rapid-diagnostic tests (RDTs), as well as geospatial estimates of malaria prevalence. Mosquito population …

See List of Professors in David L Smith University(University of Washington)

David L Smith FAQs

What is David L Smith's h-index at University of Washington?

The h-index of David L Smith has been 84 since 2020 and 111 in total.

What are David L Smith's top articles?

The articles with the titles of

Spatial Dynamics of Malaria Transmission

MGSurvE: A framework to optimize trap placement for genetic surveillance of mosquito population.

House design and risk of malaria, acute respiratory infection and gastrointestinal illness in Uganda: A cohort study

Simulating the Impacts of Augmenting Intensive Vector Control with Mass Drug Administration or Test-and-Treat Strategies on the Malaria Infectious Reservoir.

Estimating the malaria attributable fraction of fever in cohort studies through a before and after comparison of impact: Nagongera, Tororo, Uganda, 2011-2019

Pre-existing partner-drug resistance to artemisinin combination therapies facilitates the emergence and spread of artemisinin resistance: a consensus modelling study

Current dichotomous metrics obscure trends in severe and extreme child growth failure

The overlapping burden of the three leading causes of disability and death in sub-Saharan African children

...

are the top articles of David L Smith at University of Washington.

What are David L Smith's research interests?

The research interests of David L Smith are: health metrics, infectious disease dynamics, malaria, mathematical epidemiology

What is David L Smith's total number of citations?

David L Smith has 72,411 citations in total.

What are the co-authors of David L Smith?

The co-authors of David L Smith are Simon I. Hay (ORCID: 0000-0002-0611-7272), Professor Andrew J Tatem, Thomas W. Scott, Robert C Reiner, Jr, SW Lindsay, Samir Bhatt.

    Co-Authors

    H-index: 221
    Simon I. Hay (ORCID: 0000-0002-0611-7272)

    Simon I. Hay (ORCID: 0000-0002-0611-7272)

    University of Washington

    H-index: 111
    Professor Andrew J Tatem

    Professor Andrew J Tatem

    University of Southampton

    H-index: 101
    Thomas W. Scott

    Thomas W. Scott

    University of California, Davis

    H-index: 99
    Robert C Reiner, Jr

    Robert C Reiner, Jr

    University of Washington

    H-index: 91
    SW Lindsay

    SW Lindsay

    Durham University

    H-index: 86
    Samir Bhatt

    Samir Bhatt

    Københavns Universitet

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