Using empirical social contact data to model person to person infectious disease transmission: An illustration for varicella
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1015259
DOI10.1016/J.MBS.2008.12.009zbMATH Open1160.92036OpenAlexW2014639652WikidataQ33403438 ScholiaQ33403438MaRDI QIDQ1015259FDOQ1015259
Authors: Benson Ogunjimi, Niel Hens, Nele Goeyvaerts, Marc Aerts, Philippe Beutels, Pierre Van Damme
Publication date: 7 May 2009
Published in: Mathematical Biosciences (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mbs.2008.12.009
Recommendations
- Infections with Varying Contact Rates: Application to Varicella
- A deterministic model for highly contagious diseases: the case of varicella
- Modeling the transmission dynamics of varicella in Hungary
- Modeling the trade-off between transmissibility and contact in infectious disease dynamics
- A qualitative analysis of a model for the transmission of varicella-zoster virus
- Modeling infectious disease parameters based on serological and social contact data. A modern statistical perspective.
- Modelling epidemics with variable contact rates
- Modelling the spread of infections when the contact rate among individuals is short ranged: Propagation of epidemic waves
- Modelling, analysis, and simulation of measles disease transmission dynamics
- Modeling the spread of COVID-19 over varied contact networks
Cites Work
- Generalized additive models. An introduction with R.
- A general projection framework for constrained smoothing.
- The mathematics of infectious diseases
- Estimation of the Basic Reproduction Number for Infectious Diseases from Age-Stratified Serological Survey Data
- Infections with Varying Contact Rates: Application to Varicella
- An age-structured model for pertussis transmission
- Modeling the effects of varicella vaccination programs on the incidence of chickenpox and shingles
Cited In (6)
- Model structure analysis to estimate basic immunological processes and maternal risk for parvovirus B19
- Efficient estimation of age-specific social contact rates between men and women
- A deterministic model for highly contagious diseases: the case of varicella
- Contact Surface Models for Infectious Diseases
- Infections with Varying Contact Rates: Application to Varicella
- Estimating within-household contact networks from egocentric data
Uses Software
This page was built for publication: Using empirical social contact data to model person to person infectious disease transmission: An illustration for varicella
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q1015259)