Prevention of infectious diseases by public vaccination and individual protection
Xiao-Long Peng, Xin-Jian Xu, Michael Small, Xinchu Fu, Zhen Jin

TL;DR
This study models how combined public vaccination and individual protective behaviors influence epidemic dynamics on contact networks, revealing their joint effectiveness and the impact of demographic factors.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive epidemic model incorporating both vaccination and individual rewiring, analyzing their combined effects on disease spread and network structure.
Findings
Combined strategies increase epidemic thresholds and control effectiveness.
Demographic effects can promote epidemic spreading despite interventions.
Network degree distributions are influenced by newborns' connectivity patterns.
Abstract
In the face of serious infectious diseases, governments endeavour to implement containment measures such as public vaccination at a macroscopic level. Meanwhile, individuals tend to protect themselves by avoiding contacts with infections at a microscopic level. However, a comprehensive understanding of how such combined strategy influences epidemic dynamics is still lacking. We study a susceptible-infected-susceptible epidemic model with imperfect vaccination on dynamic contact networks, where the macroscopic intervention is represented by random vaccination of the population and the microscopic protection is characterised by susceptible individuals rewiring contacts from infective neighbours. In particular, the model is formulated both in populations without and then with demographic effects. Using the pairwise approximation and the probability generating function approach, we…
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