OPTIMAL CONTROL OF DISEASES IN PRISON POPULATIONS THROUGH SCREENING POLICIES OF NEW INMATES
Abstract
In this paper, we study an optimal control problem of a communicable disease in a prison population. In order to control the spread of the disease inside a prison, we consider an active case-finding strategy, consisting of screening a proportion of new inmates at the entry point, followed by a treatment depending on the results of this procedure. The control variable consists then in the coverage of the screening applied to new inmates. The disease dynamics is modeled by a SIS (susceptible-infected-susceptible) model, typically used to represent diseases that do not confer immunity after infection. We determine the optimal strategy that minimizes a combination between the cost of the screening/treatment at the entrance and the cost of maintaining infected individuals inside the prison, in a given time horizon. Using the Pontryagin maximum principle and the Hamilton???Jacobi???Bellman equation, among other tools, we provide the complete synthesis of an optimal feedback control, consisting in a bang-bang strategy with at most two switching times and no singular arc trajectory, characterizing different profiles depending on model parameters.
Más información
Título según WOS: | OPTIMAL CONTROL OF DISEASES IN PRISON POPULATIONS THROUGH SCREENING POLICIES OF NEW INMATES |
Título de la Revista: | SIAM JOURNAL ON CONTROL AND OPTIMIZATION |
Volumen: | 60 |
Número: | 2 |
Editorial: | SIAM PUBLICATIONS |
Fecha de publicación: | 2022 |
Página de inicio: | S1 |
Página final: | S26 |
DOI: |
10.1137/20M1378582 |
Notas: | ISI |