Modeling and optimal control of monkeypox with cost-effective strategies

Abstract

In this work, we develop and analyze a deterministic mathematical model to investigate the dynamics of monkeypox. We examine the local and global stability of the basic model without control variables. The outcome demonstrates that when the reproduction number , the model’s disease-free equilibrium would be locally and globally asymptotically stable. We further analyze the effective control of monkeypox in a given population by formulating and analyzing an optimal control problem. We extend the basic model to include four control variables, namely preventive strategies for transmission from rodents to humans, prevention of infection from human to human, isolation of infected individuals, and treatment of isolated individuals. We established the necessary conditions for the existence of optimal control using Pontryagin’s maximal principle. To illustrate the impact of different control combinations on the spread of monkeypox, we use the fourth-order Runge–Kutta forward–backward sweep approach to simulate the optimality system. A cost-effectiveness study is conducted to educate the public about the most cost-effective method among various control combinations. The results suggest that, of all the combinations considered in this study, implementing preventive strategies for transmission from rodents to humans is the most economical and effective among all competing strategies.

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Keywords

Monkeypox, Optimal control, Cost-effectiveness, Preventive strategies, Isolation

Citation

O. J. Peter, C. E. Madubueze, M. M. Ojo, F. A. Oguntolu, & T. A. Ayoola. (2022). Modeling and optimal control of monkeypox with cost-effective strategies. Modeling Earth Systems and Environment, 1-19. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40808-022-01607-z

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