Epidemic as a natural process

Math Biosci. 2018 May:299:97-102. doi: 10.1016/j.mbs.2018.03.012. Epub 2018 Mar 10.

Abstract

Mathematical epidemiology is a well-recognized discipline to model infectious diseases. It also provides guidance for public health officials to limit outbreaks. Nevertheless, epidemics take societies by surprise every now and then, for example, when the Ebola virus epidemic raged seemingly unrestrained in Western Africa. We provide insight to this capricious character of nature by describing the epidemic as a natural process, i.e., a phenomenon governed by thermodynamics. Our account, based on statistical mechanics of open systems, clarifies that it is impossible to predict accurately epidemic courses because everything depends on everything else. Nonetheless, the thermodynamic theory yields a comprehensive and analytical view of the epidemic. The tenet subsumes various processes in a scale-free manner from the molecular to the societal levels. The holistic view accentuates overarching procedures in arresting and eradicating epidemics.

Keywords: Evolution; Free energy; Mathematical modeling; Non-determinism; The principle of least action; The second law of thermodynamics.

MeSH terms

  • Epidemics*
  • Humans
  • Models, Theoretical*
  • Thermodynamics*