The impact of demography in a model of malaria with transmission‐blocking drugs

Author:

Ouifki Rachid1,Banasiak Jacek23ORCID,Tchoumi Stéphane Yanick24ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mathematics and Applied Mathematics North West University Mahikeng South Africa

2. Department of Mathematics and Applied Mathematics University of Pretoria Pretoria South Africa

3. Institute of Mathematics Łódź University of Technology Łódź Poland

4. Department of Mathematics and Computer Sciences ENSAI University of Ngaoundere Ngaoundere Cameroon

Abstract

In this paper, we develop and analyze a mathematical model for spreading malaria, including treatment with transmission‐blocking drugs (TBDs). The paper's main aim is to demonstrate the impact the chosen model for demographic growth has on the disease's transmission and the effect of its treatment with TBDs. We calculate the model's control reproduction number and equilibria and perform a global stability analysis of the disease‐free equilibrium point. The mathematical analysis reveals that, depending on the model's demography, the model can exhibit forward, backward, and even some unconventional types of bifurcation, where disease elimination can occur for both small and large values of the reproduction number. We also conduct a numerical analysis to explore the short‐time behavior of the model. A key finding is that for one type of demographic growth, the population experienced a significantly higher disease burden than the others, and when exposed to high levels of treatment with TBDs, only this population succeeded in effectively eliminating the disease within a reasonable timeframe.

Funder

National Research Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Reference45 articles.

1. Biology of Malaria Transmission

2. World Trade Report 2019

3. World Health Organization World malaria report 2018e 2018.https://www.who.int/malaria/publications/world‐malaria‐report‐2018/en/. Last update: 19 November 2018.

4. World Health Organization World malaria report 2021 2021.

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