A network epidemic model with preventive rewiring: comparative analysis of the initial phase
Tom Britton, David Juher, Joan Saldana

TL;DR
This paper analyzes early epidemic spread on networks with preventive rewiring, comparing branching process and pair approximation methods, and validates findings with stochastic simulations.
Contribution
It introduces and compares two approximation methods for early epidemic dynamics with preventive rewiring, highlighting their accuracy and differences.
Findings
Branching process and pair approximation predict similar thresholds without exposed node rewiring.
Pairwise models overestimate R0 above the epidemic threshold.
Branching process approximation aligns better with simulations when exposed nodes also rewire.
Abstract
This paper is concerned with stochastic SIR and SEIR epidemic models on random networks in which individuals may rewire away from infected neighbors at some rate (and reconnect to non-infectious individuals with probability or else simply drop the edge if ), so-called preventive rewiring. The models are denoted SIR- and SEIR-, and we focus attention on the early stages of an outbreak, where we derive expression for the basic reproduction number and the expected degree of the infectious nodes using two different approximation approaches. The first approach approximates the early spread of an epidemic by a branching process, whereas the second one uses pair approximation. The expressions are compared with the corresponding empirical means obtained from stochastic simulations of SIR- and SEIR- epidemics on Poisson…
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