Publication | Open Access
A comprehensive probabilistic analysis of approximate SIR‐type epidemiological models via full randomized discrete‐time Markov chain formulation with applications
24
Citations
18
References
2020
Year
EngineeringEpidemiological DynamicComputational EpidemiologyStochastic SimulationInfectious Disease ModellingInfectious Disease EcologyEpidemiologic MethodStatistical ModelingStatisticsMarkov ChainInfectious Disease EpidemiologyPathogen PrevalenceFull RandomizationProbability TheoryProbability Density FunctionEpidemiologyDisease Modeling (Genome Editing)Disease PropagationInfectious Disease ModelingDisease Modeling (Infectious Disease Modeling)Comprehensive Probabilistic AnalysisTime-varying ConfoundingStatistical InferenceMedicine
This paper provides a comprehensive probabilistic analysis of a full randomization of approximate SIR‐type epidemiological models based on discrete‐time Markov chain formulation. The randomization is performed by assuming that all input data (initial conditions, the contagion, and recovering rates involved in the transition matrix) are random variables instead of deterministic constants. In the first part of the paper, we determine explicit expressions for the so called first probability density function of each subpopulation identified as the corresponding states of the Markov chain (susceptible, infected, and recovered) in terms of the probability density function of each input random variable. Afterwards, we obtain the probability density functions of the times until a given proportion of the population remains susceptible, infected, and recovered, respectively. The theoretical analysis is completed by computing explicit expressions of important randomized epidemiological quantities, namely, the basic reproduction number, the effective reproduction number, and the herd immunity threshold. The study is conducted under very general assumptions and taking extensive advantage of the random variable transformation technique. The second part of the paper is devoted to apply our theoretical findings to describe the dynamics of the pandemic influenza in Egypt using simulated data excerpted from the literature. The simulations are complemented with valuable information, which is seldom displayed in epidemiological models. In spite of the nonlinear mathematical nature of SIR epidemiological model, our results show a strong agreement with the approximation via an appropriate randomized Markov chain. A justification in this regard is discussed.
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