Abstract
A widely used tool for analysing the Covid-19 pandemic is the standard SIR model. It seems often to be used as a black box, not taking into account that this model was derived as a special case of the seminal Kermack–McKendrick theory from 1927. This is our starting point. We explain the setup of the Kermack–McKendrick theory (passing to a discrete approach) and use medical information for specializing to a model called by us an adapted K-McK-model. It includes effects of vaccination, mass testing and mutants. We demonstrate the use of the model by applying it to the development in Germany and show, among others things, that a comparatively mild intervention reducing the time until quarantine by one day would lead to a drastic improvement.
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CITATION STYLE
Kreck, M., & Scholz, E. (2022). Back to the Roots: A Discrete Kermack–McKendrick Model Adapted to Covid-19. Bulletin of Mathematical Biology, 84(4). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11538-022-00994-9
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