Bradley D J, May R M
Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg. 1978;72(3):262-73. doi: 10.1016/0035-9203(78)90205-5.
The distribution of schistosome worms among their human hosts is not random but aggregated. The consequences of introducing aggregation into models of schistosomiasis transmission, especially that of Macdonald, are explored. There are two possibilities for aggregation, with the sexes distributed either independently or together. Both have profound though differing effects on the breakpoint concept, which is largely destroyed when the sexes are aggregated together, and Macdonald's epidemiological conclusions are not robust to variations from the Poisson distribution. The conclusion from his model that if schistosome densities in man are reduced appropriately the infection will spontaneously proceed to extinction even in the presence of conditions suitable for transmission, is also not therefore robust.
血吸虫在人类宿主中的分布并非随机,而是呈聚集状态。本文探讨了将聚集因素引入血吸虫病传播模型(尤其是麦克唐纳模型)的后果。聚集存在两种可能性,即雌雄虫体要么独立分布,要么共同分布。这两种情况对断点概念都有深远但不同的影响,当雌雄虫体聚集在一起时,断点概念在很大程度上被破坏,而且麦克唐纳的流行病学结论对于偏离泊松分布的情况并不稳健。因此,他的模型得出的结论,即如果人类体内的血吸虫密度适当降低,即使存在适合传播的条件,感染也会自发地趋于灭绝,同样也不稳健。