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The Basic Reproduction Number of an Infectious Diseasein a Stable Population:The Impact of Population Growth Rateon the Eradication Threshold

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 October 2008

H. Inaba
Affiliation:
Graduate School of Mathematical Sciences, University of Tokyo, 3-8-1 Komaba, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 153-8914, Japan
H. Nishiura*
Affiliation:
Theoretical Epidemiology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Utrecht, Yalelaan 7, 3584 CL, Utrecht, The Netherlands
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Abstract

Although age-related heterogeneity of infection has been addressed in variousepidemic models assuming a demographically stationary population, only a few studies haveexplicitly dealt with age-specific patterns of transmission in growing or decreasing population.To discuss the threshold principle realistically, the present study investigates an age-duration-structured SIR epidemic model assuming a stable host population, as the first scheme toaccount for the non-stationality of the host population. The basic reproduction number R0is derived using the next generation operator, permitting discussions over the well-knowninvasion principles. The condition of endemic steady state is also characterized by usingthe effective next generation operator. Subsequently, estimators of R0 are offered which canexplicitly account for non-zero population growth rate. Critical coverages of vaccination arealso shown, highlighting the threshold condition for a population with varying size. Whenquantifying R0 using the force of infection estimated from serological data, it should beremembered that the estimate increases as the population growth rate decreases. On thecontrary, given the same R0, critical coverage of vaccination in a growing population would behigher than that of decreasing population. Our exercise implies that high mass vaccinationcoverage at an early age would be needed to control childhood vaccine-preventable diseasesin developing countries.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© EDP Sciences, 2008

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