Abstract
The basic reproductive number, R0, provides a foundation for evaluating how various factors affect the incidence of infectious diseases. Recently, it has been suggested that, particularly for vector-transmitted diseases, R0 should be modified to account for the effects of finite host population within a single disease transmission generation. Here, we use a transmission factor approach to calculate such "finite-population reproductive numbers," under the assumption of homogeneous mixing, for both vector-borne and directly transmitted diseases. In the case of vector-borne diseases, we estimate finitepopulation reproductive numbers for both host-to-host and vector-to-vector generations, assuming that the vector population is effectively infinite. We find simple, interpretable formulas for all three of these quantities. In the direct case, we find that finite-population reproductive numbers diverge from R0 before R0 reaches half of the population size. In the vector-transmitted case, we find that the host-to-host number diverges at even lower values of R0, while the vector-to-vector number diverges very little over realistic parameter ranges. © 2014 The Author(s).
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Keegan, L., & Dushoff, J. (2014). Analytic Calculation of Finite-Population Reproductive Numbers for Direct- and Vector-Transmitted Diseases with Homogeneous Mixing. Bulletin of Mathematical Biology, 76(5), 1143–1154. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11538-014-9950-x
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