The schedule effect: can recurrent peak infections be reduced without vaccines, quarantines or school closings?
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Publication:2452800
DOI10.1016/J.MBS.2013.12.004zbMATH Open1314.92155OpenAlexW2077602853WikidataQ38423058 ScholiaQ38423058MaRDI QIDQ2452800FDOQ2452800
Authors: Danilo R. Diedrichs, Paul A. Isihara, Doeke Buursma
Publication date: 5 June 2014
Published in: Mathematical Biosciences (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mbs.2013.12.004
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Cites Work
- Effects of quarantine in six endemic models for infectious diseases
- Seasonally forced disease dynamics explored as switching between attractors
- Mathematical epidemiology.
- External forcing of ecological and epidemiological systems: a resonance approach
- SVIR epidemic models with vaccination strategies
- Seasonal dynamics and thresholds governing recurrent epidemics
Cited In (7)
- Bifurcations of a discrete-time SIR epidemic model with logistic growth of the susceptible individuals
- Complex dynamics of a discrete‐time seasonally forced SIR epidemic model
- Chaotic dynamics in the seasonally forced SIR epidemic model
- Complementarity between term-time forcing and delayed vaccination response in explaining irregular dynamics in childhood diseases
- Controlling infectious diseases: the decisive phase effect on a seasonal vaccination strategy
- Chaos analysis and explicit series solutions to the seasonally forced SIR epidemic model
- Dynamical analysis of a discrete-time SIR epidemic model
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