Tuberculosis models with fast and slow dynamics: The role of close and casual contacts

From MaRDI portal
Publication:1867119


DOI10.1016/S0025-5564(02)00112-8zbMath1015.92025WikidataQ52030161 ScholiaQ52030161MaRDI QIDQ1867119

Juan Pablo Aparicio, Carlos Castillo-Chavez, Bao-jun Song

Publication date: 2 April 2003

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

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/s0025-5564(02)00112-8


92D30: Epidemiology

92C50: Medical applications (general)

34D15: Singular perturbations of ordinary differential equations

34D23: Global stability of solutions to ordinary differential equations

92C60: Medical epidemiology


Related Items

Analysis of a tuberculosis model with a case study in Uganda, Unnamed Item, A MATHEMATICAL MODEL FOR THE IMPACT OF PUBLIC HEALTH EDUCATION CAMPAIGN FOR TUBERCULOSIS, Optimal Control Measures for Tuberculosis in a Population Affected with Insurgency, Mathematical analysis of a tuberculosis model with imperfect vaccine, A two-strain TB model with multiple latent stages, Modelling and stability analysis for a tuberculosis model with healthy education and treatment, Stochastically asymptotically stability of the multi-group SEIR and SIR models with random perturbation, Epidemiological models of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex infections, A TB model with infectivity in latent period and imperfect treatment, Optimal tuberculosis prevention and control strategy from a mathematical model based on real data, Mixed vaccination strategy for the control of tuberculosis: a case study in China, Stability of a two-strain tuberculosis model with general contact rate, The domain of attraction for the endemic equilibrium of an SIRS epidemic model, Global stability for a tuberculosis model, Assessing the potential impact of limited public health resources on the spread and control of typhoid, Approximation methods for analyzing multiscale stochastic vector-borne epidemic models, Mathematical analysis of a tuberculosis model with differential infectivity, Dynamics of a delayed epidemic model with non-monotonic incidence rate, Tuberculosis transmission model with chemoprophylaxis and treatment, Modelling local and global effects on the risk of contracting tuberculosis using stochastic Markov-chain models, Singular perturbation approach to stability of a SIRS epidemic system, Modeling HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis coinfection, Using singular perturbations to reduce an epidemiological model: application to bovine viral diarrhoea virus within-herd spread, A partial Lagrangian approach to mathematical models of epidemiology, Mathematical model of MDR-TB and XDR-TB with isolation and lost to follow-up, Spatial spread of tuberculosis through neighborhoods segregated by socioeconomic position: a stochastic automata model, A dynamic model for tuberculosis transmission and optimal treatment strategies in South Korea, Disease dynamics and mean field models for clustered networks, Global analysis of tuberculosis dynamical model and optimal control strategies based on case data in the United States, Evaluating strategies for tuberculosis to achieve the goals of WHO in China: a seasonal age-structured model study, A structured Markov chain model to investigate the effects of pre-exposure vaccines in tuberculosis control, Analysis of a mathematical model for tuberculosis: what could be done to increase case detection, Modelling effects of treatment at home on tuberculosis transmission dynamics, Analysis of a mathematical model for tuberculosis with diagnosis, Dynamics of a stochastic multigroup SEIR epidemic model, A note on some qualitative properties of a tuberculosis differential equation model with a time delay, Lyapunov functions and global properties of some tuberculosis models, Seasonal dynamics in an SIR epidemic system, Dynamic behavior and optimal scheduling for mixed vaccination strategy with temporary immunity, Global stability for an endogenous-reactivated tuberculosis model with Beddington-DeAngelis incidence, distributed delay and relapse, Dynamics of Tuberculosis: The effect of Direct Observation Therapy Strategy (DOTS) in Nigeria, Epidemic spreading in time-varying community networks, Myeloid cells in tumour–immune interactions, CASE DETECTION AND DIRECT OBSERVATION THERAPY STRATEGY (DOTS) IN NIGERIA: ITS EFFECT ON TB DYNAMICS



Cites Work