4.4 Article

Threshold dynamics of an infective disease model with a fixed latent period and non-local infections

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATHEMATICAL BIOLOGY
Volume 65, Issue 6-7, Pages 1387-1410

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00285-011-0500-y

Keywords

Infectious disease model; Reaction-diffusion equation; Non-local infection; Delay; Principal eigenvalue; Basic reproduction number

Funding

  1. NNSF of China [10871053]
  2. NSERC
  3. MITACS of Canada
  4. Premier's Research Excellence Award of Ontario
  5. University of Western Ontario

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In this paper, we derive and analyze an infectious disease model containing a fixed latency and non-local infection caused by the mobility of the latent individuals in a continuous bounded domain. The model is given by a spatially non-local reaction-diffusion system carrying a discrete delay associated with the zero-flux condition on the boundary. By applying some existing abstract results in dynamical systems theory, we prove the existence of a global attractor for the model system. By appealing to the theory of monotone dynamical systems and uniform persistence, we show that the model has the global threshold dynamics which can be described either by the principal eigenvalue of a linear non-local scalar reaction diffusion equation or equivalently by the basic reproduction number R-0 for the model. Such threshold dynamics predicts whether the disease will die out or persist. We identify the next generation operator, the spectral radius of which defines basic reproduction number. When all model parameters are constants, we are able to find explicitly the principal eigenvalue and R-0. In addition to computing the spectral radius of the next generation operator, we also discuss an alternative way to compute R-0.

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