Abstract

The HIV/AIDS model was dynamically analyzed in this study. The model has seven compartments: the uneducated, the educated, the HIV-positive who take antiretroviral therapy (ART), the HIV-positive who do not take ART, people receiving ART treatment, people with AIDS who do not receive any treatment (full-blown AIDS), and the recovered. This model takes into account the analysis of the multiple interactions between the uneducated and the educated subpopulations, the HIV-positive who take and who do not take ART. The free-disease and endemic equilibrium points, as well as the basic reproduction number ( R 0 ) as a limit condition for infection-free and endemic occurrence, were produced by a mathematical analysis. The center-manifold hypothesis was used to prove that a backward bifurcation exists. The free-disease and endemic equilibrium points coexist when R 0 < 1 . This means that HIV/AIDS is still spreading. A basic reproduction number below one is insufficient to constitute a free-disease condition. In order to determine essential parameters that significantly contribute to HIV/AIDS transmission, we computed sensitivity index values using a sensitivity analysis. The HIV/AIDS model and bifurcation parameter both identified the rate of HIV transmission from uneducated individuals to HIV-positive individuals who do not receive ART as the most crucial parameter. A numerical simulation supports the dynamical analysis.

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