An evolutionary epidemiological mechanism, with applications to type A influenza (Q1820722)

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An evolutionary epidemiological mechanism, with applications to type A influenza
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    An evolutionary epidemiological mechanism, with applications to type A influenza (English)
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    1987
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    In this paper I develop a model that describes an evolutionary epidemiological mechanism and apply this model to the epidemiology of type A influenza. This evolutionary epidemiological model differs from the classical nonevolutionary epidemiological model which has been applied to diseases like measless, rubella, and whooping cough in having a novel mechanism which causes susceptible individuals to be introduced into the host population. In the nonevolutionary model, susceptibles are continually introduced into the host population by demographic processes: most hosts that die are immune, while newborn hosts are susceptible. In this evolutionary model, the susceptible class is continually replenished because the pathogen changes genetically, and hence immunologically, from one epidemic to the next, causing previously immune hosts to become susceptible. I derive formulae which describe how the equilibrium number of infected hosts, the interepidemic period, and the probability that a host will become reinfected depend on the rate of amino acid substitution in the pathogen, m, a parameter describing the effect of these substitutions on host immunity, \(\gamma\), as well as the host population size, N, and the recovery rate, r.
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    epidemiology of type A influenza
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    evolutionary epidemiological model
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    equilibrium number of infected hosts
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    interepidemic period
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    rate of amino acid substitution in the pathogen
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