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Final Size for Epidemic Models with Asymptomatic Transmission

Carles Barril, Pierre‐Alexandre Bliman, Sı́lvia Cuadrado

2023Bulletin of Mathematical Biology11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The final infection size is defined as the total number of individuals that become infected throughout an epidemic. Despite its importance for predicting the fraction of the population that will end infected, it does not capture which part of the infected population will present symptoms. Knowing this information is relevant because it is related to the severity of the epidemics. The objective of this work is to give a formula for the total number of symptomatic cases throughout an epidemic. Specifically, we focus on different types of structured SIR epidemic models (in which infected individuals can possibly become symptomatic before recovering), and we compute the accumulated number of symptomatic cases when time goes to infinity using a probabilistic approach. The methodology behind the strategy we follow is relatively independent of the details of the model.

Topics & Concepts

Transmission (telecommunications)AsymptomaticEpidemic modelPopulationFocus (optics)Fraction (chemistry)Probabilistic logicDemographyPopulation sizeStatisticsMedicineComputer scienceMathematicsPathologyTelecommunicationsSociologyOpticsPhysicsOrganic chemistryChemistryCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesMathematical and Theoretical Epidemiology and Ecology ModelsEvolution and Genetic Dynamics
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