Threshold behaviour for a chain-binomial S-I-S infectious disease (Q1087842): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 18:32, 17 June 2024

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Threshold behaviour for a chain-binomial S-I-S infectious disease
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    Threshold behaviour for a chain-binomial S-I-S infectious disease (English)
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    1986
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    The paper is concerned with a discrete time model for the spread of an infection. Like in the classical Reed-Frost model an infectious individual can transmit the disease to any susceptible with a constant probability p (the infectious period is assumed to be very small). If an individual was infected, it itself becomes infectious after a certain period of fixed length, the latent period, which is taken as the time unit. After another time unit the individual returns to the susceptible state (SIS-epidemic). During the infectious period each susceptible makes a random number of contacts with other individuals; it is assumed that the j-th contact of a not yet infected individual with an infective will result in an infection with probability \(\beta_ j\). The process of infection is formulated stochastically and then the associated deterministic model is derived. For this model, which is essentially a first-order difference equation, it is studied under what conditions the disease becomes endemic. Besides some general results a detailed discussion is presented for the specific case where at least \(K+1\) (K\(\geq 1)\) contacts with infectives are needed for an infection to occur.
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    chain-binomial deterministic model
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    threshold behaviour
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    endemic disease
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    discrete time model
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    SIS-epidemic
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    first-order difference equation
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