1. Introduction
Currently, Pakistan is experiencing the fourth wave of the pandemic with infected and death cases. Presently, the number of reported cases to date is 1,278,114 and that of reported death cases is 28,566, while the number of recovered as of 10 November 2021 is 1,226,590. The total death reported is 2% of the infected cases and the peak of infected cases suggests a third wave in the country of Pakistan. The number of active cases for the beginning of the fourth wave started in July and will hopefully end soon. The number of infected cases is decreasing daily, while the number of recoveries is increasing with a decreased number of deaths [
1]. Due to the decreasing number of cases in the fourth wave, life in the country is coming back to normal. One of the reasons is that the vaccinations and the government’s strict polices made it possible to get things back to normal.
Since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, many researchers in their respective fields have been studying the infection of coronavirus and trying to identify the possible ways of immunizing the human being from this virus in order to follow the rules and regulations given by the World Health Organization (WHO), and to maximally immunize individuals. Regarding the studying of the coronavirus infection from different perspectives by the researchers, it is noteworthy that mathematical models are considered effective in order to study the number of infected cases and determine the possible peak of curve and its prediction for the infected COVID-19 data. The information of finding the peak of infection in a particular country can lead to decisions on how these cases can be minimized and to minimize the occurrence of future outbreak with fewer infected cases. Some mathematical studies were designed for the understanding of coronavirus infection with the reported cases from their specific countries with different strategies of controls. The study on the COVID-19 pandemic and its modeling and forecasting in India was studied in [
2]. A mathematical model was constructed for the infection outbreak in Italy and France, considering real cases [
3]. Considering a case study of Pakistan to built a mathematical model with the analysis of control strategies was considered in [
4]. The authors used the infected cases of Nigeria and studied the dynamics of coronavirus model in [
5]. The infected cases in China and their mathematical modeling with analysis were explored in [
6]. The authors in [
7] considered the mathematical modeling theory to investigate the COVID-19 infection using Ethiopian cases. The authors in [
8] used the approach of graph modeling to understand the COVID-19 infection. A model formulated to study the cases in India was explored in [
9]. The cost effective analysis of the COVID-19 infection by utilizing the theory of an optimal control was discussed in [
10]. The literature on COVID-19 dynamics is expansive as there are many works; we refer the readers to see more related work using the references in the above-mentioned studies.
Recently, researchers from different fields of science and engineering showed their interest in using fractional differential equations (FDEs) for their proposed models. An especially great interest was given to mathematical modeling in epidemiological models. Due to the many properties of FDEs, the memory effect is one of the interesting properties of fractional order models that cannot be observed in classical differential equations; see, for more details, [
11]. Note that fractional calculus has become one of the most studied fields used to explain physical properties of real-world problems, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, SIR, and health problems [
12,
13]. Fractional differential equations in the current era are used by various researchers to model their problems. Among these research problems, the COVID-19 pandemic has been studied widely, obtaining useful results regarding the infection. For example, a fractional COVID-19 model by using the power law was considered in [
14]. The COVID-19 transmission dynamics using the fractional order model was explored in [
15]. A SIR model in [
16] was formulated by the authors with the help of the Mittag–Leffler law. The spread of coronavirus and its mathematical modeling in Turkey and Africa with theory and applications were discussed in [
17]. A fractional order model in [
18] was used to study the COVID-19 infection cases in Saudi Arabia. Modeling and numerical analysis of the COVID-19 infection was explored in [
19]. A mathematical model of COVID-19 with immune response and its fractional optimal control was suggested in [
20].
In the present paper, we aim to study the coronavirus infection through a novel mathematical model by assuming four different contacts that are responsible for the COVID-19 infection. Among these contacts, the exposed, asymptomatic, symptomatic and the hospitalized individuals contact healthy people to spread the infection. In order to motivate the readers, it is possible that the infection is spreading through the contact of asymptomatic, symptomatic, and those hospitalized infected individuals, while the individuals that become exposed after contacting infected people can infect others during their exposed period. So, all the possible interactions are meaningful and valid, biologically. First, we give, in detail, the modeling of the coronavirus using classical differential equations and later extend it to the fractional order system using the power law (Caputo derivative). The rest of the results in the paper are split section-wise as follows: In
Section 2, we discuss in detail the mathematical modeling of the COVID-19 model in integers and then extend it to the fractional order model. In
Section 3, we explore the mathematical analysis of the model and its stability. We estimate the parameters of the model using the reported cases in
Section 4. The numerical results and discussion on the fractional order model are discussed in
Section 5. Finally, we summarize our work by the conclusion.
2. Model Formulation
To study the COVID-19 dynamics thorough a mathematical model, we denoted the population of humans by
at any time
t and divided it further into six different sub-classes—namely, healthy or susceptible individuals
(the individuals that are at risk of acquiring the infection, but not yet contracted the disease); exposed individuals (the individuals infected who are incubating the infection)
; asymptomatic individuals (individuals that do not show clinical symptoms, but are able to transmit the infection),
; symptomatic or infected individuals (individuals that show full symptoms of disease and infect other individuals),
; hospitalization of infected individuals (the individuals that are infected or hospitalized)
; recovered individuals (individuals who either recovered or were removed from the population )
; so,
. A study shows that about 80% of the individuals infected by COVID-19 are due to the asymptomatic infected individuals that do not show any symptoms [
21]. In other words, the individuals in class
produce a lot of infected cases of COVID-19 in the population who are unaware of their infection. Due to there being no clinical symptoms of the disease in the individuals in compartment
, disease control is more difficult. If not isolated rapidly, the individuals that show symptoms clinically detected through random diagnosed testing or the contract tracing of the confirmed COVID-19 cases will continue to unknowingly be spreading the infection. The exposed individuals who are incubating the infection also risk spreading the infection further in populations. Asymptomatic and exposed individuals in contact with healthy individuals are considered to be one of the biggest causes of COIVD-19 disease transmissions. COVID-19 with the suggested classes above and the important features of exposed and asymptomatic infection can be described in the following through evolutionary differential equations:
subject to the non-negative conditions
In system (1), we define in detail the parameter involved. The individuals that increase the population of susceptible individuals are shown by , while the natural death rate of humans in each compartment is given by decreasing the population. The contact rates such as for represente, respectively, the contact among healthy and susceptible people, the contact among healthy people and those infected with no clinical symptoms, the contact among healthy people and those infected with clinical symptoms, the contact between healthy people and hospitalized infected people. It is assumed further that . The exposed individuals progress out of the compartment E through the rate given by , and it is assumed that a proportion of individuals in the exposed class with no clinical symptoms move into the class (A) after the completion of the incubation period, while the proportion remaining show clinical symptoms by moving to the symptomatic infected class I through coming out of the incubation period. The parameters for denote, respectively, the recovery of asymptomatic, symptomatic and hospitalized infected people. The symptomatic individuals can be hospitalized at a rate of (they can be isolated at hospital or at home). The people infected with COVID-19 die due to disease in the classes I and H are shown, respectively, by the parameters and . One can estimate the total death cases reported from the model above by considering the equation .
A Fractional-Order Model
Before we construct the fractional-order model, we first defined the Caputo derivative and the related results that will be required in the onward analysis. The following have been taken from [
22,
23].
Definition 1. The Caputo derivative is defined through the following,where the symbol denotes Euler Gamma function, and . Lemma 1. Given that the function and are both continuous on , then We obtain this if
for every
, so the function
g is strictly increasing, and if
for every
, then
g is decreasing. By extending the model (1) by following the Caputo derivative definition, we obtain the following:
where
and using the initial values of (2).
The total dynamics of the fractional-order model (4) can be obtained by adding all their equations, and it is given by
when
The following feasible region is given for model (4), where the solutions related to the model lie in
3. Equilibria and Its Stability
Here, we obtain the equilibria of the fractional-order model (4) by equating the time rate of change of the system (4) to zero, and obtain the disease-free equilibrium denoted by
,
We next compute the basic reproduction number denoted by
, which is defined as: the average secondary infection introduced into a population of purely susceptible individuals producing further secondary infection. The expression for the basic reproduction number can be obtained using the method explained in [
24]. We have, for our model (4),
The basic reproduction number
for the fractional system (4) is the spectral radius of
and hence
where
,
,
and
.
Existence of Endemic Equilibria
We compute here the endemic equilibria of the model (4) by denoting it as
, given by
The above is used in the following expression,
and allows us to obtain the following,
It is obvious that and is positive whenever . The existence of (7) to give positive equilibria is only possible when have value greater than unity. Hence, for the Equation (7) when has the positive and unique solution, so the there exists a unique endemic equilibrium of the system (4) when .
We explore the stability results for the fractional-order model when disease-free case for local asymptotic stability while for the global stability case we have for . The following theorems are given:
Theorem 1. When , then the fractional model given in (4) is locally asymptotically stable at .
Proof. The fractional model (4) has the Jacobian for
for infection-free case:
It can be observed from
that the eigenvalues
are negative, while we can use the fourth-order polynomials to obtain the rest of the eigenvalues from the equation below:
where
We have all the coefficients for when and further which is the conditions for Routh–Hurtwiz criteria can be obtained easily. This ensures that the fractional-order model (4) will have eigenvalues containing negative real parts, and hence the model is locally asymptotically stable at for . □
The next theorem illustrates the global asymptotic stability of the fractional model at .
Theorem 2. The model (4) at is globally asymptotically stable if .
Proof. Here, by defining the Lyapunove function in the following,
where
, for
. From the time differentiation of (10) and further using (4), we have
Rearranging and considering the assumptions
, we have
Now, considering the values of the constants
,
,
,
, we have
So,
whenever
. Also,
if and only if
. We conclude that by following the result from [
25] the fractional model (4) is globally asymptotically stable whenever
. □
4. Estimation of Parameters
We consider the real data from Pakistan of the fourth wave to have started from 1 July 2021, until 28 October 2021. The cases are taken on daily bases, so, the time unit will be considered in the days. Among the model parameters values, we choose some of the parameters from literature, such as
,
,
, and
, which are cited properly in
Table 1. The other parameters such as the birth
and the natural death rate
, we can estimate it from the equation
. Assume that the initial population of Pakistan at the onset of fourth wave in 2021 is to be considered approximately,
, while the average life span in Pakistan is
; so, we have, after computing this,
. The list of parameters and their numerical values fitted or estimated to the data is shown in
Table 1. The initial conditions considered in the data fitting is as follows: we have
, and so in the disease absence the value of
,
,
,
and
. The basic reproduction number, computed using the values given in
Table 1 is
. The data set versus the model using the nonlinear least square curve fitting has been used and the desired results is shown in
Figure 1. In
Figure 1a is the model fitting versus data while
Figure 1b shows the predictions of the model versus data.
6. Conclusions
A new mathematical model to illustrate the dynamics of COVID-19 with the interaction of exposed, asymptomatic, symptomatic and hospitalized individuals in terms of the fractional-order Caputo derivative has been investigated. It is well known that individuals become infected with COVID-19 due to contact with asymptomatic, symptomatic, and hospitalized infected individuals, as well as those who have been exposed to it. It is noted that many health workers and doctors and those working in the management of hospitals died. We discussed the formulations of the problem and then obtained the related properties of the model mathematically. We studied the model to obtain its stability analysis on the basis of the basic reproduction number . We found that the model in the disease-free case is locally asymptotically stable whenever . The global asymptotic stability was proven for the model when . Further, we the data to be valid from 1 July 2021 to 28 October 2021 and we parameterized the model. The parameters obtained using the nonlinear least-square fitting has been used to obtain the numerical solutions graphically. The impact of the various parameters on the model equations has been discussed and shown graphically. It can be observed from the numerical results that the infection can be eliminated faster if the exposed cases, the identification of asymptomatic cases, the infected cases and those hospitalized or quarantined at home restrict their contact with healthy individuals. The testing facility of the audiovisuals should be increased and those identified as asymptomatic infected should be quarantined in order to decrease the burden and the future wave of infection in the country.