A male-female mathematical model of human papillomavirus (HPV) in African American population
From MaRDI portal
Publication:335282
DOI10.3934/mbe.2017022zbMath1362.92089OpenAlexW2530359812WikidataQ39159815 ScholiaQ39159815MaRDI QIDQ335282
Publication date: 2 November 2016
Published in: Mathematical Biosciences and Engineering (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.3934/mbe.2017022
Related Items (10)
The impact of vaccination on human papillomavirus infection with disassortative geographical mixing: a two-patch modeling study ⋮ Modelling and analysis of HFMD with the effects of vaccination, contaminated environments and quarantine in mainland China ⋮ A discrete-time nutrients-phytoplankton-oysters mathematical model of a bay ecosystem* ⋮ Dynamical behavior and density function of a stochastic model of HPV infection and cervical cancer with a case study for Xinjiang, China ⋮ Mathematical modeling for relation between parents' health education and vaccine uptake ⋮ Stochastic dynamics of human papillomavirus delineates cervical cancer progression ⋮ Optimal vaccination strategy of a constrained time-varying SEIR epidemic model ⋮ Two-sex logistic model for human papillomavirus and optimal vaccine ⋮ Modelling the Human Papilloma Virus Transmission in a Bisexually Active Host Community ⋮ A two-sex model of human papillomavirus infection: vaccination strategies and a case study
Cites Work
- Analysis of risk-structured vaccination model for the dynamics of oncogenic and warts-causing HPV types
- Determining important parameters in the spread of malaria through the sensitivity analysis of a mathematical model
- Reproduction numbers and sub-threshold endemic equilibria for compartmental models of disease transmission
- Developing Official Stochastic Population Forecasts at the US Census Bureau
- Deterministic modelling for transmission of Human Papillomavirus 6/11: impact of vaccination
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
This page was built for publication: A male-female mathematical model of human papillomavirus (HPV) in African American population