Disease-induced herd immunity and household epidemic models

The rate at which individuals in a population mix with one another can have a large impact on how far a disease spreads among that population, as well as what fraction of the population needs to be immune from infection in order to protect the remaining susceptible population from a major outbreak....

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Main Author: Critcher, Liam
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/81413/
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author Critcher, Liam
author_facet Critcher, Liam
author_sort Critcher, Liam
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The rate at which individuals in a population mix with one another can have a large impact on how far a disease spreads among that population, as well as what fraction of the population needs to be immune from infection in order to protect the remaining susceptible population from a major outbreak. In this thesis we consider both deterministic and stochastic SEIR (susceptible - exposed - infectious -recovered) epidemic models. We impose a household structure on the population, so that individuals mix globally with the population at large and, at a higher rate, locally with members of their household. We also consider an extension of this model in which individuals are typed, making global contacts at different rates dependent on their type. We investigate herd immunity for these models, providing a more realistic insight than the standard epidemic model in which all individuals in the population mix at the same rate. The disease-induced herd immunity level hD is the fraction of the population that must be infected by an epidemic to ensure that a new epidemic among the remaining susceptible population is not supercritical. For a homogeneously mixing population hD equals the classical herd immunity level hC, which is the fraction of the population that must be vaccinated in advance of an epidemic so that the epidemic is not supercritical. A detailed comparison of hD and hC is given for the households model, where we also define an approximation h˜D of hD which is more amenable to analysis. It is found that hD > hC unless the household size variability is sufficiently large, in contrast to other models with heterogeneous mixing of individuals, in which hD < hC typically occurs. We obtain the asymptotic variance for hD as the population size goes to infinity, using a Gaussian approximation. We then consider a model with individual types and household structure, deriving several reproduction numbers and a central limit theorem for the final outcome under the assumption of proportionate global mixing, which we show greatly simplifies these calculations and results. We provide comparison of hD and hC when these individual types correspond to activity levels, showing that the ordering of these herd immunity levels is strongly dependent on the distribution of the individuals of each activity level among the households. Finally, we consider the impact of global restrictions on disease-induced herd immunity in a model with household structure and types of individuals. We extend the approximation hD to account for local infection being increased during times of global restrictions. We then consider a scenario in which two supercritical epidemics can occur, the first with constant control measures, and find an optimal control such that the number of individuals ever infected across the two epidemics is minimised.
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spelling nottingham-814132025-07-31T04:40:30Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/81413/ Disease-induced herd immunity and household epidemic models Critcher, Liam The rate at which individuals in a population mix with one another can have a large impact on how far a disease spreads among that population, as well as what fraction of the population needs to be immune from infection in order to protect the remaining susceptible population from a major outbreak. In this thesis we consider both deterministic and stochastic SEIR (susceptible - exposed - infectious -recovered) epidemic models. We impose a household structure on the population, so that individuals mix globally with the population at large and, at a higher rate, locally with members of their household. We also consider an extension of this model in which individuals are typed, making global contacts at different rates dependent on their type. We investigate herd immunity for these models, providing a more realistic insight than the standard epidemic model in which all individuals in the population mix at the same rate. The disease-induced herd immunity level hD is the fraction of the population that must be infected by an epidemic to ensure that a new epidemic among the remaining susceptible population is not supercritical. For a homogeneously mixing population hD equals the classical herd immunity level hC, which is the fraction of the population that must be vaccinated in advance of an epidemic so that the epidemic is not supercritical. A detailed comparison of hD and hC is given for the households model, where we also define an approximation h˜D of hD which is more amenable to analysis. It is found that hD > hC unless the household size variability is sufficiently large, in contrast to other models with heterogeneous mixing of individuals, in which hD < hC typically occurs. We obtain the asymptotic variance for hD as the population size goes to infinity, using a Gaussian approximation. We then consider a model with individual types and household structure, deriving several reproduction numbers and a central limit theorem for the final outcome under the assumption of proportionate global mixing, which we show greatly simplifies these calculations and results. We provide comparison of hD and hC when these individual types correspond to activity levels, showing that the ordering of these herd immunity levels is strongly dependent on the distribution of the individuals of each activity level among the households. Finally, we consider the impact of global restrictions on disease-induced herd immunity in a model with household structure and types of individuals. We extend the approximation hD to account for local infection being increased during times of global restrictions. We then consider a scenario in which two supercritical epidemics can occur, the first with constant control measures, and find an optimal control such that the number of individuals ever infected across the two epidemics is minimised. 2025-07-31 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/81413/1/Critcher%20Liam%2014306170%20corrections.pdf Critcher, Liam (2025) Disease-induced herd immunity and household epidemic models. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Disease-induced herd immunity level Household epidemic model SEIR epidemic Vaccine-induced herd immunity level
spellingShingle Disease-induced herd immunity level
Household epidemic model
SEIR epidemic
Vaccine-induced herd immunity level
Critcher, Liam
Disease-induced herd immunity and household epidemic models
title Disease-induced herd immunity and household epidemic models
title_full Disease-induced herd immunity and household epidemic models
title_fullStr Disease-induced herd immunity and household epidemic models
title_full_unstemmed Disease-induced herd immunity and household epidemic models
title_short Disease-induced herd immunity and household epidemic models
title_sort disease-induced herd immunity and household epidemic models
topic Disease-induced herd immunity level
Household epidemic model
SEIR epidemic
Vaccine-induced herd immunity level
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/81413/