Influence of non-homogeneous mixing on final epidemic size in a meta-population model
From MaRDI portal
Publication:3304323
DOI10.1080/17513758.2018.1484186zbMath1447.92410OpenAlexW2809615483WikidataQ89128067 ScholiaQ89128067MaRDI QIDQ3304323
Zhilan Feng, Ya-nan Zhang, Jing-An Cui
Publication date: 31 July 2020
Published in: Journal of Biological Dynamics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/17513758.2018.1484186
Related Items
Likelihood-Based Inference for Partially Observed Epidemics on Dynamic Networks, Vaccine failure, seasonality and demographic changes associate with mumps outbreaks in Jiangsu Province, China: age-structured mathematical modelling study, An SIS model for the epidemic dynamics with two phases of the human day-to-day activity, The importance of quarantine: modelling the COVID-19 testing process, Getting jab or regular test: observations from an impulsive epidemic COVID-19 model, Coupled Systems of Renewal Equations for Forces of Infection through a Contact Network, Unnamed Item, Mathematical analysis for COVID-19 resurgence in the contaminated environment, Evaluating vaccination effectiveness of group-specific fractional-dose strategies, Optimal strategic pandemic control: human mobility and travel restriction, The heterogeneous mixing model of COVID-19 with interventions, Effect of non-homogeneous mixing and asymptomatic individuals on final epidemic size and basic reproduction number in a meta-population model
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Generality of the final size formula for an epidemic of a newly invading infectious disease
- The final size of an epidemic and its relation to the basic reproduction number
- An elaboration of theory about preventing outbreaks in homogeneous populations to include heterogeneity or preferential mixing
- Final and peak epidemic sizes for \(SEIR\) models with quarantine and isolation
- Epidemic models with heterogeneous mixing and treatment
- Heterogeneity in disease-transmission modeling
- Modeling and analyzing HIV transmission: The effect of contact patterns
- Is \(R_0\) a good predictor of final epidemic size: foot-and-mouth disease in the UK
- Constrained minimization problems for the reproduction number in meta-population models
- Evaluating targeted interventions via meta-population models with multi-level mixing
- A final size relation for epidemic models
- Final Size of an Epidemic for a Two-Group SIR Model
- Mathematical Models in Epidemiology