Global dynamics of a staged-progression model with amelioration for infectious diseases

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Abstract

We analyze the global dynamics of a mathematical model for infectious diseases that progress through distinct stages within infected hosts with possibility of amelioration. An example of such diseases is HIV/AIDS that progresses through several stages with varying degrees of infectivity; amelioration can result from a host's immune action or more commonly from antiretroviral therapies, such as highly active antiretroviral therapy. For a general n-stage model with constant recruitment and bilinear incidence that incorporates amelioration, we prove that the global dynamics are completely determined by the basic reproduction number R 0. If R 0≤1, then the disease-free equilibrium P 0 is globally asymptotically stable, and the disease always dies out. If R 0>1, P 0 is unstable, a unique endemic equilibrium P* is globally asymptotically stable, and the disease persists at the endemic equilibrium. Impacts of amelioration on the basic reproduction number are also investigated. © 2008 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

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Guo, H., & Li, M. Y. (2008). Global dynamics of a staged-progression model with amelioration for infectious diseases. Journal of Biological Dynamics, 2(2), 154–168. https://doi.org/10.1080/17513750802120877

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