Sunday, 14 November 2010

MALARIA: zooprophylaxis

11 November 2010

Kyeongah Nah, Yongkuk Kim & Jung Min Lee
The diversion of disease carrying insect from humans to animals may reduce transmission of diseases such as malaria. The use of animals to mitigate mosquito bites on human is called ‘zooprophylaxis’. We introduce a mathematical model for Plasmodium vivax malaria transmission with two bloodmeal hosts (humans and domestic animals) to study the effect of zooprophylaxis. After computing the basic reproduction number from the proposed model, we explore how perturbations in the parameters, sensitive to the effects of control measures, affect its value. Zooprophylaxis is shown to determine whether a basic reproduction becomes bigger than an outbreak threshold value or not. Sensitivity analysis shows that increasing the relative animal population size works better in P. vivax malaria control than decreasing the mosquito population when the relative animal population size is larger than a threshold value.
http://www.malarianexus.com/articles/read/104/the-dilution-effect-of-the-domestic-animal-population-on-the-transmission-of-p-vivax-malaria/

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