Recent research has demonstrated the importance of spatial diffusion and environmental heterogeneity in influencing the transmission dynamics of infectious diseases. At the same time, human mobility patterns have been shown to exhibit scale-free, nonlocal dynamics characterized by an anomalous Lévy process diffusion, which is mathematically represented by nonlocal equations involving fractional Laplacian operators. To investigate the effects of environmental heterogeneity and long-range geographical disease transmission, we propose a time-periodic susceptible-infectious-susceptible (SIS) epidemic model that incorporates anomalous diffusion and spatial heterogeneity. The key issues of this paper include the existence and stability of both disease-free and endemic periodic equilibria, as well as the impact of diffusion rates and fractional powers on the spatial distribution of these periodic states. Our analytical findings indicate that spatio-temporal heterogeneity promotes disease persistence and that the fractional power can modulate the transmission threshold.
Shi et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: