Controlling emerging infectious diseases like SARS
DOI10.1016/J.MBS.2004.07.006zbMATH Open1062.92058OpenAlexW2004610156WikidataQ47838370 ScholiaQ47838370MaRDI QIDQ1776752FDOQ1776752
Authors: Niels G. Becker, Kathryn Glass, Zhengfeng Li, Geoffrey K. Aldis
Publication date: 12 May 2005
Published in: Mathematical Biosciences (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mbs.2004.07.006
Recommendations
- Controlling the spread of a class of epidemics
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1098843
- The role of vaccination in the control of SARS
- Timely identification of optimal control strategies for emerging infectious diseases
- Control of emerging infectious diseases using responsive imperfect vaccination and isolation
- Containment strategies of epidemic invasions
- The control of vector-borne disease epidemics
- Predicting and controlling the Ebola infection
- Prevention of influenza pandemic by multiple control strategies
Basic reproduction numberControl of outbreaksEffective reproduction numberElimination of an infectionEmerging infectionsEpidemic control
Cites Work
- Contact tracing in stochastic and deterministic epidemic models
- The effect of household distribution on transmission and control of highly infectious diseases
- Title not available (Why is that?)
- Title not available (Why is that?)
- Title not available (Why is that?)
- Immunization levels for preventing epidemics in a community of households made up of individuals of various types
Cited In (8)
- The role of vaccination in the control of SARS
- Control of emerging infectious diseases using responsive imperfect vaccination and isolation
- Optimal vaccination schemes for epidemics among a population of households, with application to variola minor in Brazil
- The state-reproduction number for a multistate class age structured epidemic system and its application to the asymptomatic transmission model
- Threshold behaviour of emerging epidemics featuring contact tracing
- Stochastic Epidemic Models in Structured Populations Featuring Dynamic Vaccination and Isolation
- The role of health care workers and antiviral drugs in the control of pandemic influenza
- Predicting COVID-19 using past pandemics as a guide: how reliable were mathematical models then, and how reliable will they be now?
This page was built for publication: Controlling emerging infectious diseases like SARS
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q1776752)