A sharp threshold for disease persistence in host metapopulations

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Abstract

A sharp threshold is established that separates disease persistence from the extinction of small disease outbreaks in an S→E→I→R→S type metapopulation model. The travel rates between patches depend on disease prevalence. The threshold is formulated in terms of a basic replacement ratio (disease reproduction number), ℛ0, and, equivalently, in terms of the spectral bound of a transmission and travel matrix. Since frequency-dependent (standard) incidence is assumed, the threshold results do not require knowledge of a disease-free equilibrium. As a trade-off, for ℛ0>1, only uniform weak disease persistence is shown in general, while uniform strong persistence is proved for the special case of constant recruitment of susceptibles into the patch populations. For ℛ0<1, Lyapunov's direct stability method shows that small disease outbreaks do not spread much and eventually die out. © 2007 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

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Dhirasakdanon, T., Thieme, H. R., & Van Den Driessche, P. (2007). A sharp threshold for disease persistence in host metapopulations. Journal of Biological Dynamics, 1(4), 363–378. https://doi.org/10.1080/17513750701605465

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