English

A useful relationship between epidemiology and queueing theory

Probability 2009-09-28 v1 Populations and Evolution

Abstract

In this paper we establish a relation between the spread of infectious diseases and the dynamics of so called M/G/1 queues with processor sharing. The in epidemiology well known relation between the spread of epidemics and branching processes and the in queueing theory well known relation between M/G/1 queues and birth death processes will be combined to provide a framework in which results from queueing theory can be used in epidemiology and vice versa. In particular, we consider the number of infectious individuals in a standard SIR epidemic model at the moment of the first detection of the epidemic, where infectious individuals are detected at a constant per capita rate. We use a result from the literature on queueing processes to show that this number of infectious individuals is geometrically distributed.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0812.4135,
  title  = {A useful relationship between epidemiology and queueing theory},
  author = {Pieter Trapman and Martin Bootsma},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0812.4135},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

17 pages

R2 v1 2026-06-21T11:54:48.627Z