Kelly Joëlle Gatore Sinigirira, Wandera Ogana, Faraimunashe Chirove
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Mathematical Modelling of Malaria Integrating Temperature, Rainfall, and Vegetation Index
Environmental factors such as temperature, rainfall, and vegetation index play a crucial role in the transmission dynamics of malaria. Accurately quantifying the complex relationships between these variables and the malaria burden poses a significant challenge. In this study, we developed a host-mosquito mathematical model to investigate the impact of temperature, rainfall, and normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) on malaria transmission dynamics calibrated with the Burundi case’s study. Mathematical analysis explored the equilibria, stability, and computation of the model’s threshold values. Numerical simulations suggest that temperature, rainfall, and vegetation index affect the transmission dynamics of malaria. Temperature and NDVI appear to exhibit a more pronounced influence among these factors. The conditions conducive to malaria transmission include a mean monthly temperature range of [20-25 °C], an averaged monthly NDVI range of approximately [0.4-0.6]. The reproduction number was used as a quantitative measure to predict the impact of temperature, rainfall, and NDVI on malaria transmission dynamics across Burundi. The results suggest a progressive increase in the reproduction number over time, suggesting a threat of the rising number of cases in Burundi if drastic control measures are not implemented.
期刊介绍:
Acta Applicandae Mathematicae is devoted to the art and techniques of applying mathematics and the development of new, applicable mathematical methods.
Covering a large spectrum from modeling to qualitative analysis and computational methods, Acta Applicandae Mathematicae contains papers on different aspects of the relationship between theory and applications, ranging from descriptive papers on actual applications meeting contemporary mathematical standards to proofs of new and deep theorems in applied mathematics.