Kristen L. Beck, Edward Seabolt, et al.
Viruses
We extend a technique of approximation of the long-term behavior of a supercritical stochastic epidemic model, using the WKB approximation and a Hamiltonian phase space, to the subcritical case. The limiting behavior of the model and approximation are qualitatively different in the subcritical case, requiring a novel analysis of the limiting behavior of the Hamiltonian system away from its deterministic subsystem. This yields a novel, general technique of approximation of the quasistationary distribution of stochastic epidemic and birth-death models and may lead to techniques for analysis of these models beyond the quasistationary distribution. For a classic SIS model, the approximation found for the quasistationary distribution is very similar to published approximations but not identical. For a birth-death process without depletion of susceptibles, the approximation is exact. Dynamics on the phase plane similar to those predicted by the Hamiltonian analysis are demonstrated in cross-sectional data from trachoma treatment trials in Ethiopia, in which declining prevalences are consistent with subcritical epidemic dynamics.
Kristen L. Beck, Edward Seabolt, et al.
Viruses
Vishrawas Gopalakrishnan, Sayali Pethe, et al.
Epidemics
Yuta Shirogane, Elsa Rousseau, et al.
PLoS Pathogens
Shangying Wang, Simone Bianco
APS March Meeting 2021