Variability order of the latent and the infectious periods in a deterministic SEIR epidemic model and evaluation of control effectiveness
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2269782
DOI10.1016/j.mbs.2009.12.007zbMath1183.92077OpenAlexW2010587380WikidataQ51760662 ScholiaQ51760662MaRDI QIDQ2269782
Publication date: 11 March 2010
Published in: Mathematical Biosciences (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mbs.2009.12.007
Related Items
A frailty model for intervention effectiveness against disease transmission when implemented with unobservable heterogeneity, Transmission dynamics of an influenza model with age of infection and antiviral treatment, Hopf bifurcation analysis of a delayed SEIR epidemic model with infectious force in latent and infected period, The size of epidemics in populations with heterogeneous susceptibility, Threshold dynamics in an SEIRS model with latency and temporary immunity, A vector-borne contamination model to assess food-borne outbreak intervention strategies
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Generality of the final size formula for an epidemic of a newly invading infectious disease
- Stochastic orders
- Final and peak epidemic sizes for \(SEIR\) models with quarantine and isolation
- Age-of-infection and the final size relation
- Calculation of \({\mathcal R}_0\) for age-of-infection models
- Separate roles of the latent and infectious periods in shaping the relation between the basic reproduction number and the intrinsic growth rate of infectious disease outbreaks
- On the Lambert \(w\) function
- A characterization of the dilation order and its applications
- Life distributions. Structure of nonparametric, semiparametric, and parametric families.
- Epidemiological models with non-exponentially distributed disease stages and applications to disease control
- A note on the ℒ-class of life distributions
- On the spread of a disease with gamma distributed latent and infectious periods
- Some majorization orderings of heterogeneity in a class of epidemics
- Comparing sums of exchangeable Bernoulli random variables
- An unusual stochastic order relation with some applications in sampling and epidemic theory
- Principles of Statistical Inference