4.6 Article

Multiple outbreaks in epidemic spreading with local vaccination and limited vaccines

Journal

NEW JOURNAL OF PHYSICS
Volume 20, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1367-2630/aad723

Keywords

complex networks; epidemic modeling; percolation; SIR model

Funding

  1. Israel Science Foundation
  2. ONR
  3. Israel Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST)
  4. Italy Ministry of Foreign Affairs
  5. BSF-NSF
  6. MOST
  7. Japan Science and Technology Agency
  8. BIU Center for Research in Applied Cryptography and Cyber Security
  9. DTRA [HDTRA-1-10-1-0014]
  10. UNMdP
  11. CONICET [PIP 00443/2014]

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How to prevent the spread of human diseases is a great challenge for the scientific community and so far there are many studies in which immunization strategies have been developed. However, these kind of strategies usually do not consider that medical institutes may have limited vaccine resources available. In this manuscript, we explore the susceptible-infected-recovered model with local dynamic vaccination, and considering limited vaccines. In this model, susceptibles in contact with an infected individual, are vaccinated -with probability omega- and then get infected -with probability beta. However, when the fraction of immunized individuals reaches a threshold V-L, the vaccination stops, after which only the infection is possible. In the steady state, besides the critical points beta(c), and omega(c) that separate a non-epidemic from an epidemic phase, we find for a range of V-L another transition points, beta* > beta(c), and omega* < omega(c), which correspond to a novel discontinuous phase transition. This critical value separates a phase where the amount of vaccines is sufficient, from a phase where the disease is strong enough to exhaust all the vaccination units. For a disease with fixed beta, the vaccination probability w can be controlled in order to drastically reduce the number of infected individuals, using efficiently the available vaccines. Furthermore, the temporal evolution of the system close to beta* or omega*, shows that after a peak of infection the system enters into a quasi-stationary state, with only a few infected cases. But if there are no more vaccines, these few infected individuals could originate a second outbreak, represented by a second peak of infection. This state of apparent calm, could be dangerous since it may lead to misleading conclusions and to an abandon of the strategies to control the disease.

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