Results on the dynamics for models for the sexual transmission of the human immunodeficiency virus
From MaRDI portal
Publication:916597
DOI10.1016/0893-9659(89)90080-3zbMath0703.92022OpenAlexW2039395299WikidataQ56774051 ScholiaQ56774051MaRDI QIDQ916597
Kenneth L. Cooke, Simon A. Levin, Carlos Castillo-Chavez, Wenzhang Huang
Publication date: 1989
Published in: Applied Mathematics Letters (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://hdl.handle.net/1813/31577
robustnessmultiple endemic equilibriaacquired immunodeficiency syndromesurvivorship functionsdistributed delay modelmultiple group modelssexual spread of HIV/AIDSsingle group modelspread of the human immuno-deficiency virus
Related Items (31)
Backward bifurcation, equilibrium and stability phenomena in a three-stage extended BRSV epidemic model ⋮ Backward bifurcations, turning points and rich dynamics in simple disease models ⋮ Forward-backward and period doubling bifurcations in a discrete epidemic model with vaccination and limited medical resources ⋮ Dynamical analysis of a sex-structured Chlamydia trachomatis transmission model with time delay ⋮ Dynamics of an age-structured two-strain model for malaria transmission ⋮ SIS and SIR epidemic models under virtual dispersal ⋮ Causes of backward bifurcations in some epidemiological models ⋮ A simple epidemiological model for populations in the wild with Allee effects and disease-modified fitness ⋮ Modelling the transmission dynamics and control of the novel 2009 swine influenza (H1N1) pandemic ⋮ Mathematical analysis of an age-structured model for malaria transmission dynamics ⋮ Empirical methods for the estimation of the mixing probabilities for socially structured populations from a single survey sample ⋮ Effects of education, vaccination and treatment on HIV transmission in homosexuals with genetic heterogeneity. ⋮ On the uniqueness of endemic equilibria of an HIV/AIDS transmission model for a heterogeneous population ⋮ Consumer-resource coexistence as a means of reducing infectious disease ⋮ Mathematical assessment of the role of pre-exposure prophylaxis on HIV transmission dynamics ⋮ Differential characteristics of primary infection and re-infection can cause backward bifurcation in HCV transmission dynamics ⋮ Multiscale analysis of compartment models with dispersal ⋮ Curtailing smoking dynamics: a mathematical modeling approach ⋮ Role of incidence function in vaccine-induced backward bifurcation in some HIV models ⋮ The probability of extinction in a bovine respiratory syncytial virus epidemic model ⋮ Asymmetry and multiple endemic equilibria in a model for HIV transmission in a heterosexual population ⋮ SIR dynamics with economically driven contact rates ⋮ Backward bifurcation in epidemic models: problems arising with aggregated bifurcation parameters ⋮ Hopf bifurcation of a delay SIRS epidemic model with novel nonlinear incidence: Application to scarlet fever ⋮ A mathematical model of epidemics with screening and variable infectivity ⋮ Epidemiological models with age structure, proportionate mixing, and cross-immunity ⋮ On the role of long incubation periods in the dynamics of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). I: Single population models ⋮ Mathematical analysis of the role of repeated exposure on malaria transmission dynamics ⋮ Dynamic phenomena arising from an extended core group model ⋮ On the Z-type control of backward bifurcations in epidemic models ⋮ Basic reinfection number and backward bifurcation
Cites Work
- On the role of long incubation periods in the dynamics of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). I: Single population models
- On the definition and the computation of the basic reproduction ratio \(R_ 0\) in models for infectious diseases in heterogeneous populations
- Using mathematical models to understand the AIDS epidemic
- Like-with-like preference and sexual mixing models
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
This page was built for publication: Results on the dynamics for models for the sexual transmission of the human immunodeficiency virus