The interaction of seasonal forcing and immunity and the resonance dynamics of malaria

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Abstract

Theory has emphasized the importance of both intrinsic factors such as host immunity and extrinsic drivers such as climate in determining disease dynamics. In particular, seasonality may lead to multi-annual cycles in prevalence, but the likelihood of this depends on the role of acquired immunity. Some diseases including malaria have immunity that falls between the classic susceptible-infectious-removed and susceptible-infectious-susceptible models. Here, we investigate the general conditions promoting the subharmonic resonance behaviour that may lead to multi-annual cycles in a general malaria dynamical model. Utilizing two complementary approaches to bifurcation analyses, we show that resonance is promoted by processes shortening the length of the infectious period and that subharmonic cycles are favoured in situations with strong seasonality in transmission but at intermediate levels of endemicity. We discuss the implications of our results for understanding prevalence patterns in long-term malaria datasets from Kenya that show multi-annual cycles and one from Thailand that does not and discuss the possible implications of treatment. © 2009 The Royal Society.

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APA

Childs, D. Z., & Boots, M. (2010). The interaction of seasonal forcing and immunity and the resonance dynamics of malaria. Journal of the Royal Society Interface, 7(43), 309–319. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2009.0178

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