An epidemiological model for direct and indirect transmission of typhoid fever
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1122537
DOI10.1016/0025-5564(89)90081-3zbMath0675.92012WikidataQ40771990 ScholiaQ40771990MaRDI QIDQ1122537
Publication date: 1989
Published in: Mathematical Biosciences (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/0025-5564(89)90081-3
equilibrium points; computer simulations; epidemiology; long cycle; indirect transmission; globally stable; control policies; Local stability; short cycle; direct transmission; modified SIS epidemiological model; Thresholds; typhoid fever
92D25: Population dynamics (general)
93C15: Control/observation systems governed by ordinary differential equations
Related Items
MODELING THE CONTROL OF BACTERIAL DISEASE BY SOCIAL MEDIA ADVERTISEMENTS: EFFECTS OF AWARENESS AND SANITATION, MODELING THE ROLE OF VACCINATION, ENVIRONMENTAL SANITATION, AND SATURATED TREATMENT ON THE SPREAD OF TYPHOID FEVER, High endemic levels of typhoid fever in rural areas of Ghana may stem from optimal voluntary vaccination behaviour, Optimal reduced-mixing for an SIS infectious-disease model, Modeling the spread of an infectious disease with bacteria and carriers in the environment, Assessing the potential impact of limited public health resources on the spread and control of typhoid, Modelling the spread of bacterial infectious disease with environmental effect in a logistically growing human population, Analysis of a model of bovine brucellosis using singular perturbations, Modelling the spread of bacterial disease: effect of service providers from an environmentally degraded region, Modelling the spread of carrier-dependent infectious diseases with environmental effect, A dynamical model for HIV-typhoid co-infection with typhoid vaccine, Modeling the impact of sanitation and awareness on the spread of infectious diseases, Modelling the dynamics of antimicrobial-resistant typhoid infection with environmental transmission, Effectiveness of control and preventive measures influenced by pathogen trait evolution: example of Escherichia Coli O157:H7
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Heterogeneity in disease-transmission modeling
- Qualitative analyses of communicable disease models
- A deterministic model for gonorrhea in a nonhomogeneous population
- Computerized epidemiological model of typhoid fever with age structure and its use in the planning and evaluation of antityphoid immunization and sanitation programmes