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Determination of critical community size from an HIV/AIDS model
- Source :
- PLoS ONE, Vol 16, Iss 1, p e0244543 (2021), PLoS ONE
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2021.
-
Abstract
- After an epidemic outbreak, the infection persists in a community long enough to engulf the entire susceptible population. Local extinction of the disease could be possible if the susceptible population gets depleted. In large communities, the tendency of eventual damp down of recurrent epidemics is balanced by random variability. But, in small communities, the infection would die out when the number of susceptible falls below a certain threshold. Critical community size (CCS) is considered to be the mentioned threshold, at which the infection is as likely as not to die out after a major epidemic for small communities unless reintroduced from outside. The determination of CCS could aid in devising systematic control strategies to eradicate the infectious disease from small communities. In this article, we have come up with a simplified computation based approach to deduce the CCS of HIV disease dynamics. We consider a deterministic HIV model proposed by Silva and Torres, and following Nåsell, introduce stochasticity in the model through time-varying population sizes of different compartments. Besides, Metcalf’s group observed that the relative risk of extinction of some infections on islands is almost double that in the mainlands i.e. infections cease to exist at a significantly higher rate in islands compared to the mainlands. They attributed this phenomenon to the greater recolonization in the mainlands. Interestingly, the application of our method on demographic facts and figures of countries in the AIDS belt of Africa led us to expect that existing control measures and isolated locations would assist in temporary eradication of HIV infection much faster. For example, our method suggests that through systematic control strategies, after 7.36 years HIV epidemics will temporarily be eradicated from different communes of island nation Madagascar, where the population size falls below its CCS value, unless the disease is reintroduced from outside.
- Subjects :
- RNA viruses
Epidemiology
Normal Distribution
HIV Infections
Pathology and Laboratory Medicine
Population density
Disease Outbreaks
Geographical Locations
Immunodeficiency Viruses
Risk Factors
education.field_of_study
Multidisciplinary
Population size
Geography
HIV epidemiology
Medical Microbiology
Susceptible individual
Viral Pathogens
Viruses
Physical Sciences
Infectious diseases
Medicine
Critical community size
Pathogens
Research Article
Medical conditions
Infectious Disease Control
Science
Population
Viral diseases
Microbiology
Infectious Disease Epidemiology
Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)
Retroviruses
Madagascar
medicine
Humans
Disease Dynamics
Epidemics
education
Microbial Pathogens
Population Density
Medicine and health sciences
Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome
Stochastic Processes
Models, Statistical
Extinction
Lentivirus
Organisms
HIV
Biology and Life Sciences
Probability Theory
Probability Distribution
medicine.disease
Infectious disease (medical specialty)
Africa
People and Places
Mathematics
Demography
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 19326203
- Volume :
- 16
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- PLoS ONE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....a1580f413d5ba332e0f715770ab06414