4.5 Article

LONG-TERM ANALYSIS OF A STOCHASTIC SIRS MODEL WITH GENERAL INCIDENCE RATES

Journal

SIAM JOURNAL ON APPLIED MATHEMATICS
Volume 80, Issue 2, Pages 814-838

Publisher

SIAM PUBLICATIONS
DOI: 10.1137/19M1246973

Keywords

SIRS model; extinction; permanence; stationary distribution; ergodicity

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [DMS-1710827, DMS-1853467]
  2. Simons Foundation [523736]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This paper investigates a stochastic SIRS epidemic model with an incidence rate that is sufficiently general and that covers many incidence rate models considered to date in the literature. We classify the extinction and permanence by introducing A, a real-valued threshold. We show that if lambda < 0, then the disease will eventually disappear (i.e., the disease-free state is globally asymptotically stable); if the threshold value lambda > 0, the epidemic becomes strongly stochastically permanent. This result substantially generalizes and improves the related results in the literature. Moreover, the mathematical development in this paper is interesting in its own right. The essential difficulties lie in that the dynamics of the susceptible class depend explicitly on the removed class resulting in a three-dimensional system rather than a two-dimensional system. Consequently, the methodologies developed in the literature are not applicable here. One of the main ingredients in the analyses is this: Though it is not possible to compare solutions in the interior and on the boundary for all t is an element of [0, infinity), approximation in a long but finite interval [0, T] can be carried out. Then, using the ergodicity of the solution on the boundary and exploiting the mutual interplay between the distance of solutions in the interior and solutions on the boundary and the exponential decay or growth (depending on the sign of the Lyapunov exponent), one can classify the behavior of the system. The convergence to the invariant measure is established under the total variation norm together with the corresponding rate of convergence. To demonstrate, some numerical examples are provided to illustrate our results.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available