An epidemiological model for HIV/AIDS with proportional recruitment

From MaRDI portal
Publication:1325006

DOI10.1016/0025-5564(93)90051-BzbMath0793.92011OpenAlexW2088322667WikidataQ52387054 ScholiaQ52387054MaRDI QIDQ1325006

Xiaodong Lin, Herbert W. Hethcote, Pauline van den Driessche

Publication date: 7 July 1994

Published in: Mathematical Biosciences (Search for Journal in Brave)

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/0025-5564(93)90051-b



Related Items

Dynamical behavior of a higher order stochastically perturbed HIV/AIDS model with differential infectivity and amelioration, Qualitative analysis of an HIV/AIDS model with treatment and nonlinear perturbation, A model for HIV in Asia, Modelling and analysis of the spread of AIDS epidemic with immigration of HIV infectives, An SIS epidemic model with variable population size and a delay, Analysis of a sex-structured HIV/AIDS model with the effect of screening of infectives, DYNAMICS ANALYSIS OF A VACCINATION MODEL FOR HPV TRANSMISSION, Dynamics of a stochastic HIV/AIDS model with treatment under regime switching, Global dynamics of a staged-progression model for HIV/AIDS with amelioration, Global dynamics of a staged-progression model with amelioration for infectious diseases, Global dynamics of a multistage SIR model with distributed delays and nonlinear incidence rate, Stability of an HIV/AIDS treatment model with different stages, Analysis of risk-structured vaccination model for the dynamics of oncogenic and warts-causing HPV types, Analysis of exact solution of stochastic sex-structured HIV/AIDS epidemic model with effect of screening of infectives, MODELING THE SPREAD OF HIV IN A STAGE STRUCTURED POPULATION: EFFECT OF AWARENESS, Differential susceptibility epidemic models, The differential susceptibility SIR epidemic model with time delay and pulse vaccination, The reproductive number for an HIV model with differential infectivity and staged progression, The differential susceptibility SIR epidemic model with stage structure and pulse vaccination, Modeling the population level effects of an HIV-1 vaccine in an era of highly active antiretroviral therapy, Optimal intervention strategies of staged progression HIV infections through an age-structured model with probabilities of ART drop out, The differential infectivity and staged progression models for the transmission of HIV, Modelling heterogeneities in individual frailties in epidemic models., Reproduction numbers and sub-threshold endemic equilibria for compartmental models of disease transmission, A model of HIV/AIDS with staged progression and amelioration, Modeling the impact of random screening and contact tracing in reducing the spread of HIV.



Cites Work