Oxford Mathematician explains SIR disease model for COVID-19 (Coronavirus)

9 comments

  1. How is s determined for a Novel disease ? Is s anyone who hasn’t been vaccinated and hasn’t had the disease , or does the person have to have antibodies to be included in s ? What happens if some of the I are Not immune and go back into s , rather than going to r ?

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    • S is anyone that is susceptible to a particular disease. So people that are vaccinated (if a vaccine exists) would be excluded, as would anyone that has had the disease before and has antibodies that prevent them from catching it again etc. You make a valid point about people potentially not being immune after having the disease and recovering, and they could certainly go back to the susceptible category. However, in this basic model I’ve explained we purposefully choose not to include this possibility. In the real-world models being used by scientists around the world, this would be included.

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  2. Hey, Dr. Tom, I loved your video. Do you think if I could get the pdf of the SIR model in the way you explained. Please let me know.

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  3. N = 1000 # Total Population in an particular Area of a country
    I_0 = 5 # Initial Infectives (misclassified as COVID negative)
    S_0 = N – I_0 = 995 # Initial Susceptible
    R_0 = 1.51 # COVID19 Reproduction number of the country on April 10

    q = R_0/S_0 = 0.001518
    I_max = I_0 + S_0 – (1/q)*(1+ln(q*S_0)) = 69.58 ~ 70

    Now, according to your explanation, can I claim that: ‘If I_0 = 5 people were misclassified as COVID negative during RTPCR test & they moved freely; then there’s a possibility that those 5 person can infect maximum of 69~70 people” ??

    Actually, I was writing for an article. Can I use this & is my claim valid?

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  4. Can I please have your email ID so that I need some help in solving some mathematical modeling for my research…

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