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Brandy L. Rapatski

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Title: NSERC Applications Author: Stephen Dueck Last modified by: brandy Created Date: 4/25/2002 2:03:05 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Brandy L. Rapatski


1
A Model for the Study of HIV/AIDS
  • Brandy L. Rapatski
  • Juan Tolosa
  • Richard Stockton
  • College of NJ

2
Classic Model Compartment Model
S
I
R
Susceptible Infected
Recovered
  • Removed/Recovered Class
  • Immunity (cant infect or be infected)
  • Death
  • Isolation

3
Assumptions
  • An average infective makes contact sufficient to
    transmit infection with bN others per unit time.
    (N total population).
  • Probability a random contact by an infective is
    with a susceptible is S/N
  • The number of new infections in unit time is
  • bN (S/N)I bSI
  • There is no entry into or departure from the
    population except possibly through death from the
    disease.
  • A fraction a of infectives leave the infective
    class per unit time.

4
S
I
R
5
Qualitative Approach
6
Basic Reproduction Number
The number of secondary infections caused by a
single infective introduced into a wholly
susceptible population over the course of the
infection of this single infective.
7
Progression of Infection by Stage
  • We investigate how infectivity varies with stage
    of infection.

1/6 Year
7 Years
3 Years
Death
First Stage
Second Stage
Third Stage including AIDS
Before modern medical intervention AIDS is
roughly the last year of the third stage
8
Progression of Infection by Stagean alternative
set of durations
  • Infectivity varies by stage of the disease

1/6 Year
7 Years
2 Years
AIDS Death
First Stage
Second Stage
Third Stage
Before modern medical intervention Here last
year of AIDS is omitted due to sexual inactivity
9
Untreated Viral Loads
Anderson, R. M. The spread of HIV and sexual
mixing patterns, pp. 71-86 in Mann, J. and D.
Tarantola (eds.), AIDS in the World II Global
Dimensions, Social Roots, and Responses. The
Global AIDS Policy Coalition. (New York Oxford
University Press, 1996).
10
Modes of HIV Transmission
  • Sexual Contact
  • IV Drug Use
  • Vertical Transmission (Mother to Child)
  • Blood Transfusion

11
Modeling SF Gay Population the Data
  • HIV exploded in San Francisco between the years
    1978 and 1984.
  • San Francisco obtained high quality data on 6875
    gay men Infection rates and number of sexual
    contacts.
  • Blood samples were taken and frozen during the
    years HIV was quietly breaking out as part of a
    hepatitis vaccine study.

12
San Francisco
13
San Francisco Transmission Dynamics
  • Analysis of 1978-1984
  • Six Activity Levels (from survey data)
  • Infectiousness depends on stage (3 stages)
  • Bathhouse Assumption
  • Men vary in how often they visit the bathhouses
    but once inside choose partners at random.

14
Model Compartments
  • Individuals can be in any of four stages
    (including susceptible) and in any of six
    activity groups. So the model keeps track of
    fraction of people in each of the 4 x 6
    subpopulations.

15
Simple Transmission Dynamics
16
Multiple Group Transmission Dynamics
from Group j to group i
17
Go to Six-Group Models
18
Six-Group Models
19
Current Work
  • Test and Treat US MSM HIV/AIDS population

20
Go to Test and Treat Model
21
Juans Stuff ?
22
Contact Information
  • Brandy.rapatski_at_stockton.edu
  • Juan.tolosa_at_stockton.edu

23
Current MSM Epidemic in US
  • MSM accounted for 71 of all HIV infections among
    male adults and adolescents in 2005 even though
    only about 5 to 7 of male adults and
    adolescents in the United States identify
    themselves as MSM
  • Through its National HIV Behavioral Surveillance
    system, CDC found that 25 of the MSM surveyed in
    5 large cities were infected with HIV and 48 of
    those infected were unaware of their infections.
  • Young black MSM in this study were more likely to
    be unaware of their infection approximately 9
    of 10 young black MSM compared to 6 of 10 young
    white men.
  • Of the men who tested positive, most (74) had
    previously tested negative for HIV infection and
    59 believed that they were at low or very low
    risk.
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