Pages that link to "Item:Q1264484"
From MaRDI portal
The following pages link to The effect of pair formation and variable infectivity on the spread of an infection without recovery (Q1264484):
Displaying 21 items.
- Dynamic concurrent partnership networks incorporating demography (Q299362) (← links)
- Social contact processes and the partner model (Q303942) (← links)
- The influence of concurrent partnerships on the dynamics of HIV/AIDS (Q504389) (← links)
- Generality of endemic prevalence formulae (Q900716) (← links)
- Modeling the population level effects of an HIV-1 vaccine in an era of highly active antiretroviral therapy (Q1026624) (← links)
- Dynamic modeling of herpes simplex virus type-2 (HSV-2) transmission: Issues in structural uncertainty (Q1026635) (← links)
- Analysis and simulation of a stochastic, discrete-individual model of STD transmission with partnership concurrency (Q1582564) (← links)
- Branching process approach for epidemics in dynamic partnership network (Q1692118) (← links)
- HIV transmissions by stage in dynamic sexual partnerships (Q1784041) (← links)
- The basic reproduction ration \(R_ 0\) for a sexually transmitted disease in a pair formation model with two types of pairs (Q1804858) (← links)
- Stochastic effects on endemic infection levels of disseminating versus local contacts (Q1867109) (← links)
- Monogamous networks and the spread of sexually transmitted diseases (Q1877139) (← links)
- Monotonicity of the number of passages in linear chains and of the basis reproduction number in epidemic models (Q1978083) (← links)
- Modeling public health campaigns for sexually transmitted infections via optimal and feedback control (Q2008262) (← links)
- On considering the influence of recovered individuals in disease propagations (Q2199608) (← links)
- Partnership dynamics and strain competition (Q2202355) (← links)
- \(SI\) infection on a dynamic partnership network: characterization of \(R_0\) (Q2346893) (← links)
- Case and partnership reproduction numbers for a curable sexually transmitted infection (Q2635017) (← links)
- Transmission Probabilities and Reproduction Numbers for Sexually Transmitted Infections with Variable Infectivity: Application to the Spread of HIV Between Low- and High-Activity Populations (Q5190579) (← links)
- Advances in medical statistics arising from the AIDS epidemic (Q5424106) (← links)
- Staged HIV transmission and treatment in a dynamic model with long-term partnerships (Q6038675) (← links)