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Impact of Distance on Epidemiological Dynamics in Human Connection Network with Mobility

Md. Arquam, Suchi Kumari, Utkarsh Tiwari, Mohammad Al-saffar

TL;DR

The study delves into the impact of distance on various parameters of epidemiological dynamics throughout human mobility and indicates that the proposed model closely aligns with observed patterns of COVID-19 spread based on the analysis done on the available datasets.

Abstract

The spread of infectious diseases is often influenced by human mobility across different geographical regions. Although numerous studies have investigated how diseases like SARS and COVID-19 spread from China to various global locations, there remains a gap in understanding how the movement of individuals contributes to disease transmission on a more personal or human-to-human level. Typically, researchers have employed the concept of metapopulation movement to analyze how diseases move from one location to another. This paper shifts focus to the dynamics of disease transmission, incorporating the critical factor of distance between an infected person and a healthy individual during human movement. The study delves into the impact of distance on various parameters of epidemiological dynamics throughout human mobility. Mathematical expressions for important epidemiological metrics, such as the basic reproduction number ($R_0$) and the critical infection rate ($β_{critical}$), are derived in relation to the distance between individuals. The results indicate that the proposed model closely aligns with observed patterns of COVID-19 spread based on the analysis done on the available datasets.

Impact of Distance on Epidemiological Dynamics in Human Connection Network with Mobility

TL;DR

The study delves into the impact of distance on various parameters of epidemiological dynamics throughout human mobility and indicates that the proposed model closely aligns with observed patterns of COVID-19 spread based on the analysis done on the available datasets.

Abstract

The spread of infectious diseases is often influenced by human mobility across different geographical regions. Although numerous studies have investigated how diseases like SARS and COVID-19 spread from China to various global locations, there remains a gap in understanding how the movement of individuals contributes to disease transmission on a more personal or human-to-human level. Typically, researchers have employed the concept of metapopulation movement to analyze how diseases move from one location to another. This paper shifts focus to the dynamics of disease transmission, incorporating the critical factor of distance between an infected person and a healthy individual during human movement. The study delves into the impact of distance on various parameters of epidemiological dynamics throughout human mobility. Mathematical expressions for important epidemiological metrics, such as the basic reproduction number () and the critical infection rate (), are derived in relation to the distance between individuals. The results indicate that the proposed model closely aligns with observed patterns of COVID-19 spread based on the analysis done on the available datasets.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 12 sections, 15 equations, 7 figures, 3 tables.

Figures (7)

  • Figure 1: Number of Daily infection in Indian States from March 1, 2020 to February 1, 2021
  • Figure 2: Degree Distribution of Human Connection Network of Uttar Pradesh considering movement of migrated population from various states
  • Figure 3: Degree Distribution of Human Connection Network of Maharashtra considering movement of migrated population from various states
  • Figure 4: The dynamics of Epidemic spreading is plotted to show the change in population in different compartments of the total population
  • Figure 5: $R_0$ is plotted to show the basic reproduction number of COVID-19 in the state of Uttar Pradesh and Maharashtra
  • ...and 2 more figures