This thesis is concerned with the description and analysis of a stochastic model for the spread of a directly transmissible infection, leading to permanent immunity after recovery, in a fully susceptible population with a social structure characterised by the presence of households and workplaces. The model considered is highly idealised, but contains the key factors affecting the spread of a directly transmissible infection, namely those environments where frequent and intense contacts are most likely. Important analytical insights include the definition of a novel household reproduction number RH, representing the average number of households infected by a single household, which is shown to overcome some of the limitations of a previousl...
This paper is concerned with a stochastic SIR (susceptible-infective-removed) model for the spread o...
There has been considerable recent interest in models for epidemics on networks describing social co...
For a wide range of airborne infectious diseases, transmission within the family or household is a k...
This thesis is concerned with the description and analysis of a stochastic model for the spread of ...
Early mathematical representations of infectious disease dynamics assumed a single, large, homogeneo...
Early mathematical representations of infectious disease dynamics assumed a single, large, homogeneo...
In this thesis, three stochastic epidemic models for intervention for emerging diseases are consider...
In Chapter 1 we describe the motivation for the development of a new model for the spread of infecti...
In Chapter 1 we describe the motivation for the development of a new model for the spread of infecti...
Early mathematical representations of infectious disease dynamics assumed a single, large, homogeneo...
In this thesis several problems concerning the stochastic modelling of emerging infections are consi...
Early mathematical representations of infectious disease dynamics assumed a single, large, homogeneo...
This paper considers SIR and SIS epidemics among a population partitioned into households. This hete...
This paper is concerned with a stochastic SIR (susceptible-infective-removed) model for the spread o...
Infectious diseases represent a leading cause of human mortality, and have a substantial social and ...
This paper is concerned with a stochastic SIR (susceptible-infective-removed) model for the spread o...
There has been considerable recent interest in models for epidemics on networks describing social co...
For a wide range of airborne infectious diseases, transmission within the family or household is a k...
This thesis is concerned with the description and analysis of a stochastic model for the spread of ...
Early mathematical representations of infectious disease dynamics assumed a single, large, homogeneo...
Early mathematical representations of infectious disease dynamics assumed a single, large, homogeneo...
In this thesis, three stochastic epidemic models for intervention for emerging diseases are consider...
In Chapter 1 we describe the motivation for the development of a new model for the spread of infecti...
In Chapter 1 we describe the motivation for the development of a new model for the spread of infecti...
Early mathematical representations of infectious disease dynamics assumed a single, large, homogeneo...
In this thesis several problems concerning the stochastic modelling of emerging infections are consi...
Early mathematical representations of infectious disease dynamics assumed a single, large, homogeneo...
This paper considers SIR and SIS epidemics among a population partitioned into households. This hete...
This paper is concerned with a stochastic SIR (susceptible-infective-removed) model for the spread o...
Infectious diseases represent a leading cause of human mortality, and have a substantial social and ...
This paper is concerned with a stochastic SIR (susceptible-infective-removed) model for the spread o...
There has been considerable recent interest in models for epidemics on networks describing social co...
For a wide range of airborne infectious diseases, transmission within the family or household is a k...