TY - JOUR
T1 - Stability and bifurcation analysis of epidemic models with saturated incidence rates
T2 - An application to a nonmonotone incidence rate
AU - Enatsu, Yoichi
AU - Nakata, Yukihiko
PY - 2014/8
Y1 - 2014/8
N2 - We analyze local asymptotic stability of an SIRS epidemic model with a distributed delay. The incidence rate is given by a general saturated function of the number of infective individuals. Our first aim is to find a class of nonmonotone incidence rates such that a unique endemic equilibrium is always asymptotically stable. We establish a characterization for the incidence rate, which shows that nonmonotonicity with delay in the incidence rate is necessary for destabilization of the endemic equilibrium. We further elaborate the stabil- ity analysis for a specific incidence rate. Here we improve a stability condition obtained in Y. Yang and D. Xiao, In uence of latent period and nonlinear incidence rate on the dynamics of SIRS epidemiological models, Disc. Cont. Dynam. Sys. B 13 (2010) 195-211, which is illustrated in a suitable param- eter plane. Two-parameter plane analysis together with an application of the implicit function theorem facilitates us to obtain an exact stability condition. It is proven that as increasing a parameter, measuring saturation effect, the number of infective individuals at the endemic steady state decreases, while the equilibrium can be unstable via Hopf bifurcation. This can be interpreted as that reducing a contact rate may cause periodic oscillation of the number of infective individuals, thus disease can not be eradicated completely from the host population, though the level of the endemic equilibrium for the infective population decreases. Numerical simulations are performed to illustrate our theoretical results.
AB - We analyze local asymptotic stability of an SIRS epidemic model with a distributed delay. The incidence rate is given by a general saturated function of the number of infective individuals. Our first aim is to find a class of nonmonotone incidence rates such that a unique endemic equilibrium is always asymptotically stable. We establish a characterization for the incidence rate, which shows that nonmonotonicity with delay in the incidence rate is necessary for destabilization of the endemic equilibrium. We further elaborate the stabil- ity analysis for a specific incidence rate. Here we improve a stability condition obtained in Y. Yang and D. Xiao, In uence of latent period and nonlinear incidence rate on the dynamics of SIRS epidemiological models, Disc. Cont. Dynam. Sys. B 13 (2010) 195-211, which is illustrated in a suitable param- eter plane. Two-parameter plane analysis together with an application of the implicit function theorem facilitates us to obtain an exact stability condition. It is proven that as increasing a parameter, measuring saturation effect, the number of infective individuals at the endemic steady state decreases, while the equilibrium can be unstable via Hopf bifurcation. This can be interpreted as that reducing a contact rate may cause periodic oscillation of the number of infective individuals, thus disease can not be eradicated completely from the host population, though the level of the endemic equilibrium for the infective population decreases. Numerical simulations are performed to illustrate our theoretical results.
KW - Delay differential equation
KW - Epidemic model
KW - Hopf bifurcation
KW - Linearized stability
KW - Nonlinear incidence rate
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84896981411
U2 - 10.3934/mbe.2014.11.785
DO - 10.3934/mbe.2014.11.785
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84896981411
SN - 1547-1063
VL - 11
SP - 785
EP - 805
JO - Mathematical Biosciences and Engineering
JF - Mathematical Biosciences and Engineering
IS - 4
ER -