The effect of vaccination on the competitive advantage of two strains of an infectious disease
From MaRDI portal
Publication:6661667
DOI10.1007/S11538-024-01378-XMaRDI QIDQ6661667
Jared Pemberton, David A. Rubel, Matthew D. Johnston, Bruce Pell
Publication date: 13 January 2025
Published in: Bulletin of Mathematical Biology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Cites Work
- Analysis of a vaccine model with cross-immunity: when can two competing infectious strains coexist?
- A competitive exclusion principle for pathogen virulence
- Epidemiological models with age structure, proportionate mixing, and cross-immunity
- On the definition and the computation of the basic reproduction ratio \(R_ 0\) in models for infectious diseases in heterogeneous populations
- Epidemiologic interference of virus populations
- A contribution to the mathematical theory of epidemics.
- Reproduction numbers and sub-threshold endemic equilibria for compartmental models of disease transmission
- Cross immunity protection and antibody-dependent enhancement in a distributed delay dynamic model
- Transmission dynamics of a two-strain pairwise model with infection age
- Generalizations of the `linear chain trick': incorporating more flexible dwell time distributions into mean field ODE models
- Strain replacement in an epidemic model with super-infection and perfect vaccination
- An apparent paradox of horizontal and vertical disease transmission
- SEROTYPE REPLACEMENT OF VERTICALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES THROUGH PERFECT VACCINATION
- HIV vaccines: The effect of the mode of action on the coexistence of HIV subtypes
- Competitive Exclusion in Gonorrhea Models and Other Sexually Transmitted Diseases
- An Introduction to Mathematical Epidemiology
- The importance of vaccinated individuals to population-level evolution of pathogens
This page was built for publication: The effect of vaccination on the competitive advantage of two strains of an infectious disease
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q6661667)