A stochastic differential equation model for the spread of HIV amongst people who inject drugs (Q332919)

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A stochastic differential equation model for the spread of HIV amongst people who inject drugs
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    A stochastic differential equation model for the spread of HIV amongst people who inject drugs (English)
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    9 November 2016
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    Summary: We introduce stochasticity into the deterministic differential equation model for the spread of HIV amongst people who inject drugs (PWIDs) studied by the second author and \textit{G. Hay} [IMA J. Math. Appl. Med. Biol. 14, No. 1, 11--38 (1997; Zbl 0867.92022)]. This was based on the original model constructed by \textit{E. H. Kaplan}, [``Needles that kill: modeling human immunodeficiency virus transmission via shared drug injection equipment in shooting galleries'', Clin. Infect. Dis. 11, No. 2, 289--298 (1989; \url{doi:10.1093/clinids/11.2.289})] which analyses the behaviour of HIV/AIDS amongst a population of PWIDs. We derive a stochastic differential equation (SDE) for the fraction of PWIDs who are infected with HIV at time. The stochasticity is introduced using the well-known standard technique of parameter perturbation. We first prove that the resulting SDE for the fraction of infected PWIDs has a unique solution in (0, 1) provided that some infected PWIDs are initially present and next construct the conditions required for extinction and persistence. Furthermore, we show that there exists a stationary distribution for the persistence case. Simulations using realistic parameter values are then constructed to illustrate and support our theoretical results. Our results provide new insight into the spread of HIV amongst PWIDs. The results show that the introduction of stochastic noise into a model for the spread of HIV amongst PWIDs can cause the disease to die out in scenarios where deterministic models predict disease persistence.
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    spread of HIV
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    stochastic differential equation
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    stationary distribution
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