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Mathematical analysis of the dynamics of COVID-19 in Africa under the influence of asymptomatic cases and re-infection.

Abayomi Samuel OkeOluwafemi Isaac BadaGaniyu RasaqVictoria Adodo
Published in: Mathematical methods in the applied sciences (2021)
Coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) hit the world in December 2019, and only less than 5% of the 15 million cases were recorded in Africa. A major call for concern was the significant rise from 2% in May 2020 to 4.67% by the end of July 15, 2020. This drastic increase calls for quick intervention in the transmission and control strategy of COVID-19 in Africa. A mathematical model to theoretically investigate the consequence of ignoring asymptomatic cases on COVID-19 spread in Africa is proposed in this study. A qualitative analysis of the model is carried out with and without re-infection, and the reproduction number is obtained under re-infection. The results indicate that increasing case detection to detect asymptomatically infected individuals will be very effective in containing and reducing the burden of COVID-19 in Africa. In addition, the fact that it has not been confirmed whether a recovered individual can be re-infected or not, then enforcing a living condition where recovered individuals are not allowed to mix with the susceptible or exposed individuals will help in containing the spread of COVID-19.
Keyphrases
  • coronavirus disease
  • sars cov
  • respiratory syndrome coronavirus
  • randomized controlled trial
  • risk factors