Business World

How Facebook could stop a disease outbreak

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PARIS — Facebook accounts and telephone records can be used to pinpoint the best individual­s to vaccinate to stop a disease outbreak in its tracks, researcher­s said Wednesday.

Such people would be “central” in their social networks, and thus likelier to spread diseasecau­sing germs from one group to another.

Assuming there is an outbreak, and not enough vaccines for every person in the world, immunizing these well-connected individual­s would remove social “bridges” by which germs can spread, experts wrote in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface.

The study, which tracked the digital and physical contacts of more than 500 university students, concluded that people who are central in their digital networks are also central in their real-life human networks.

“If you are a hub for your friends in the sense that you have many contacts via phone calls or on Facebook, making you a bridge between diverse communitie­s, chances are high that you are also likely to be a bridge to connect those communitie­s in case of an epidemic, such as influenza,” study coauthor Enys Mones of the Technical University of Denmark told AFP.

“By understand­ing the online contacts, we can find individual­s who are such central members of the population and focus targeted counter-measures on them when there are limited resources for vaccinatio­n.”

Using computer modeling, the research then calculated that vaccinatin­g these “central” individual­s would be “almost as efficient as the most optimal ( existing) vaccinatio­n strategies.”

It was also cheaper, as digital activity is easy to trace.

The goal of vaccinatio­n is to reduce the size of the population at risk of infection. It achieves something called “herd immunity”, whereby unvaccinat­ed people are increasing­ly unlikely to come into contact with an infectious individual. —

 ??  ?? EMPLOYEES have lunch at the canteen at Facebook’s new headquarte­rs, designed by Canadian-born American architect Frank Gehry, at Rathbone Place in central London on Dec. 4, 2017.
EMPLOYEES have lunch at the canteen at Facebook’s new headquarte­rs, designed by Canadian-born American architect Frank Gehry, at Rathbone Place in central London on Dec. 4, 2017.

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