Abstract

To effectively and efficiently reduce the morbidity and mortality that may be caused by outbreaks of emerging infectious diseases, it is very important for public health agencies to make informed decisions for controlling the spread of the disease. Such decisions must incorporate various kinds of intervention strategies, such as vaccinations, school closures and border restrictions. Recently, researchers have paid increased attention to searching for effective vaccine distribution strategies for reducing the effects of pandemic outbreaks when resources are limited. Most of the existing research work has been focused on how to design an effective age-structured epidemic model and to select a suitable vaccine distribution strategy to prevent the propagation of an infectious virus. Models that evaluate age structure effects are common, but models that additionally evaluate geographical effects are less common. In this paper, we propose a new SEIR (susceptible—exposed—infectious šC recovered) model, named the hybrid SEIR-V model (HSEIR-V), which considers not only the dynamics of infection prevalence in several age-specific host populations, but also seeks to characterize the dynamics by which a virus spreads in various geographic districts. Several vaccination strategies such as different kinds of vaccine coverage, different vaccine releasing times and different vaccine deployment methods are incorporated into the HSEIR-V compartmental model. We also design four hybrid vaccination distribution strategies (based on population size, contact pattern matrix, infection rate and infectious risk) for controlling the spread of viral infections. Based on data from the 2009–2010 H1N1 influenza epidemic, we evaluate the effectiveness of our proposed HSEIR-V model and study the effects of different types of human behaviour in responding to epidemics.

Highlights

  • The rapid spread of an infectious disease can have a devastating impact on human welfare, lowering the quality of people’s lives and causing increased mortality

  • We propose a new SEIR model, named the hybrid SEIR-V model (HSEIR-V), which considers the dynamics of infection prevalence in several age-specific host populations, and seeks to characterize the dynamics by which a virus spreads in various geographic districts

  • We perform a brief survey of ways to incorporate different intervention strategies such as vaccination, antiviral prophylaxis and treatment, or area and household quarantines into models for controlling the dynamics of an epidemic

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The rapid spread of an infectious disease can have a devastating impact on human welfare, lowering the quality of people’s lives and causing increased mortality. We adopt two model outcome measures to evaluate the effects of vaccine distribution strategies These measures include (1) the final infection attack rates, according to the number of accumulated individuals and (2) the size of the infectious population during the spread of the virus.

Methods
CA φij Á ð1 À aijÞ Á Eij ð13Þ
À aij Á ð1 À bijÞ ð20Þ
Related work
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call