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Table 1.

The list of parameters used for modeling.

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Table 2.

The disease parameters as used in the modeling and simulation are calibrated according to the epidemiological data of the 2009 Hong Kong H1N1 influenza epidemic [11], [31], [32], [34].

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Figure 1.

Contact patterns inferred from the socio-demographical census data of Hong Kong.

We consider disease transmissions among individuals between 0 and 85+ years old and divide them into 18 age groups. The contact matrices are generated corresponding to the likelihoods of individuals mixing together within respective social settings: A household (), B school (), C workplace (), D general community (). E The overall contact matrix is calculated as the linear combination of the four setting-specific contact matrices. The combination coefficient of each matrix denotes the ratio of effective contacts occurring in that social setting. F The population size in each age group.

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Figure 2.

The baseline scenario of disease spread.

We calibrate the proposed disease model according to the 2009 Hong Kong H1N1 influenza epidemic. In doing so, we collect the laboratory-confirmed cases of H1N1 infection reported by the Centre for Health Protection (CHP) of Hong Kong Public Health Department for 200 days since the disease onsite in early May 2009 [36]. A The temporal dynamics of disease spread in terms of the proportion of the newly infected cases reported each day to the total number of disease infections. B A comparison of the observed and estimated age-specific attack rates.

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Figure 3.

The number of reported infections in different age groups during the spread of H1N1 influenza in Hong Kong.

We collected the laboratory-confirmed cases of infection reported by the Centre for Health Protection (CHP) of Hong Kong Public Health Department for 200 days since the disease onsite in early May 2009 [36].

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Figure 4.

Prioritization of age groups for vaccine allocation during the course of disease spread.

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Figure 5.

Prioritization of social settings for individuals contact reduction in different stages of disease spread.

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Figure 6.

Prioritization of age groups and social settings for implementing age-specific vaccination and setting-specific contact reduction concurrently in different stages of disease spread.

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Figure 7.

Disease dynamics under the intervention measures of vaccine allocation and contact reduction.

Baseline scenario without any intervention (black solid curve); contact reduction only in schools (blue solid curve), households (red solid curve), workplaces (yellow solid curve), and general communities (green solid curve); vaccination only (black dash curve); vaccination and contact reduction in schools (blue dash curve), households (red dash curve), workplaces (yellow dash curve), and general communities (green dash curve).

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