Incidence of infectious diseases is an under-researched topic in regional science. This situation is unfortunate because the occurrence of these types of diseases frequently has far-reaching welfare impacts at household, regional, national, and even international levels. Given its welfare impacts and soaring incidence, inter alia, because of climate change, increasing population density, higher mobility, and increasing immunity to several common medicines, the occurrence and spread of infectious diseases should become a regular research topic in regional science. There are also methodological reasons why regional scientists should pay (more) attention to the incidence of infectious diseases. Although both regional science and epidemiology d...
Obvious spatial infection patterns are often observed in cases associated with airborne transmissibl...
Public health surveillance data are often incomplete, particularly where resources are lacking, but ...
Doctor of PhilosophyDepartment of StatisticsTrevor HefleyDisease surveillance data are commonly used...
Incidence of infectious diseases is an under-researched topic in regional science. This situation is...
Incidence of infectious diseases is an under-researched topic in regional science. This situation is...
Incidence of infectious diseases is an under-researched topic in regional science. This situation is...
Incidence of infectious diseases is an under-researched topic in regional science. This situation is...
During transmission of seasonal endemic diseases such as measles and influenza, spatial waves of inf...
Mathematical models can aid in the understanding of the risks associated with the global spread of i...
A major obstacle in the spatial analysis of infectious disease surveillance data is the problem of u...
The SIR (susceptible-infectious-recovered) model is a well known method for predicting the number of...
Abstract Infectious diseases continue to pose a significant public health burden despite the great p...
The spreading of infectious diseases has dramatically shaped our history and society. The quest to u...
The SIR (susceptible-infectious-recovered) model is a well known method for predicting the number of...
Despite many successes in the control of human infectious diseases they continue to pose a consider...
Obvious spatial infection patterns are often observed in cases associated with airborne transmissibl...
Public health surveillance data are often incomplete, particularly where resources are lacking, but ...
Doctor of PhilosophyDepartment of StatisticsTrevor HefleyDisease surveillance data are commonly used...
Incidence of infectious diseases is an under-researched topic in regional science. This situation is...
Incidence of infectious diseases is an under-researched topic in regional science. This situation is...
Incidence of infectious diseases is an under-researched topic in regional science. This situation is...
Incidence of infectious diseases is an under-researched topic in regional science. This situation is...
During transmission of seasonal endemic diseases such as measles and influenza, spatial waves of inf...
Mathematical models can aid in the understanding of the risks associated with the global spread of i...
A major obstacle in the spatial analysis of infectious disease surveillance data is the problem of u...
The SIR (susceptible-infectious-recovered) model is a well known method for predicting the number of...
Abstract Infectious diseases continue to pose a significant public health burden despite the great p...
The spreading of infectious diseases has dramatically shaped our history and society. The quest to u...
The SIR (susceptible-infectious-recovered) model is a well known method for predicting the number of...
Despite many successes in the control of human infectious diseases they continue to pose a consider...
Obvious spatial infection patterns are often observed in cases associated with airborne transmissibl...
Public health surveillance data are often incomplete, particularly where resources are lacking, but ...
Doctor of PhilosophyDepartment of StatisticsTrevor HefleyDisease surveillance data are commonly used...