Mathematical analysis of a disease transmission model with quarantine, isolation and an imperfect vaccine

被引:50
作者
Safi, Mohammad A. [1 ]
Gumel, Abba B. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Manitoba, Dept Math, Winnipeg, MB R3T 2N2, Canada
基金
加拿大自然科学与工程研究理事会;
关键词
Quarantine; Isolation; Vaccine; Backward bifurcation; Equilibria; Stability; TUBERCULOSIS; EQUILIBRIA; DYNAMICS; IMPACT; AGENT; SARS;
D O I
10.1016/j.camwa.2011.03.095
中图分类号
O29 [应用数学];
学科分类号
070104 ;
摘要
A new mathematical model for the transmission dynamics of a disease subject to the quarantine (of latent cases) and isolation (of symptomatic cases) and an imperfect vaccine is designed and analyzed. The model undergoes a backward bifurcation, where a stable disease-free equilibrium co-exists with a stable endemic equilibrium when the associated reproduction threshold is less than unity. It is shown that the backward bifurcation phenomenon can be removed if the vaccine is perfect or if mass action incidence, instead of standard incidence, is used in the model formulation. Further, the model has a unique endemic equilibrium when the threshold quantity exceeds unity. A nonlinear Lyapunov function, of the Goh-Volterra type, is used to show that the endemic equilibrium is globally-asymptotically stable for a special case. Numerical simulations of the model show that the singular use of a quarantine/isolation strategy may lead to the effective disease control (or elimination) if its effectiveness level is at least moderately high enough. The combined use of the quarantine/isolation strategy with a vaccination strategy will eliminate the disease, even for the low efficacy level of the universal strategy considered in this study. It is further shown that the imperfect vaccine could induce a positive or negative population-level impact depending on the size (or sign) of a certain associated epidemiological threshold. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:3044 / 3070
页数:27
相关论文
共 23 条
[1]  
Anderson R.M., 1982, Population biology of infectious diseases
[2]  
[Anonymous], 2012, Applications of centre manifold theory
[3]  
[Anonymous], 1995, THEORY CHEMOSTAT DYN
[4]  
Blower S, 2002, QUANTIATIVE EVALUATION OF HIV PREVENTION PROGRAMS, P260
[5]   Dynamical models of tuberculosis and their applications [J].
Castillo-Chavez, C ;
Song, BJ .
MATHEMATICAL BIOSCIENCES AND ENGINEERING, 2004, 1 (02) :361-404
[6]   Model parameters and outbreak control for SARS [J].
Chowell, G ;
Castillo-Chavez, C ;
Fenimore, PW ;
Kribs-Zaleta, CM ;
Arriola, L ;
Hyman, JM .
EMERGING INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2004, 10 (07) :1258-1263
[7]  
DIEKMANN O, 1990, J MATH BIOL, V28, P365
[8]   Epidemiological determinants of spread of causal agent of severe acute respiratory syndrome in Hong Kong [J].
Donnelly, CA ;
Ghani, AC ;
Leung, GM ;
Hedley, AJ ;
Fraser, C ;
Riley, S ;
Abu-Raddad, LJ ;
Ho, LM ;
Thach, TQ ;
Chau, P ;
Chan, KP ;
Lam, TH ;
Tse, LY ;
Tsang, T ;
Liu, SH ;
Kong, JHB ;
Lau, EMC ;
Ferguson, NM ;
Anderson, RM .
LANCET, 2003, 361 (9371) :1761-1766
[9]   Theoretical assessment of public health impact of imperfect prophylactic HIV-1 vaccines with therapeutic benefits [J].
Elbasha, Elamin H. ;
Gumel, Abba B. .
BULLETIN OF MATHEMATICAL BIOLOGY, 2006, 68 (03) :577-614
[10]   Backward bifurcations in dengue transmission dynamics [J].
Garba, S. M. ;
Gumel, A. B. ;
Abu Bakar, M. R. .
MATHEMATICAL BIOSCIENCES, 2008, 215 (01) :11-25