A model for the control of transmission dynamics of human monkeypox disease in Sub-Saharan Africa

Bolarinwa Bolaji, Abdullahi Ibrahim, Favour Ani, B. Omede, Godwin Acheneje
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Abstract

The Human Monkeypox virus has received significant research interest in recent times. While few researchers have studied the effects of vaccination on human-to-animal or animal-to-human Monkeypox transmission, others just studied the effects of treatment on human Monkeypox. In this article, we made the proposition of a deterministic vaccine model that deals with the dynamics of the effects of vaccination and treatment on human Monkeypox in sub-Saharan Africa. We investigated the effects of vaccination on the various epidemiological classes qualitatively. The findings from the analysis of the model are that the model possesses two equilibria, locally asymptotically stable disease-free equilibrium (DFE) when an epidemiological threshold - the effective reproductive number is less than unity, and locally asymptotically stable endemic equilibrium when the number is greater than unity. We then corroborated the theoretical findings with numerical simulations, which reveal that when the rate of vaccination is increased resulting in many newly born persons in the populace being vaccinated, the prevalence of the deadly scourge is significantly reduced, while newly born individuals that miss vaccination experience a drastic torment of the deadly disease that often occasion death. Further revelation from the simulations is that when greater efforts
撒哈拉以南非洲人类猴痘传播动态控制模型
近来,人类猴痘病毒引起了研究人员的极大兴趣。很少有研究人员研究接种疫苗对猴痘病毒在人与动物或动物与人之间传播的影响,其他研究人员只是研究治疗对猴痘病毒的影响。在本文中,我们提出了一个确定性疫苗模型,该模型涉及疫苗接种和治疗对撒哈拉以南非洲人类猴痘影响的动态变化。我们定性研究了疫苗接种对各种流行病类别的影响。对模型的分析结果表明,该模型有两个均衡点,即当流行病学临界值--有效繁殖数量小于一的时候,局部渐近稳定的无病均衡(DFE);当有效繁殖数量大于一的时候,局部渐近稳定的流行均衡(DFE)。我们随后通过数值模拟证实了这一理论发现,结果表明,当疫苗接种率提高,导致人口中许多新出生的人接种疫苗时,致命疾病的流行率会显著降低,而错过疫苗接种的新出生的人则会经历致命疾病的剧烈折磨,往往导致死亡。模拟实验的进一步启示是,如果加大力度
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