If the proportion of the population that is immune exceeds the
herd immunity level for the disease, then the disease can no longer persist in the population and its transmission dies out. Thus, a disease can be eliminated from a population if enough individuals are immune due to either vaccination or recovery from prior exposure to disease. For example,
smallpox eradication, with the last wild case in 1977, and certification of the eradication of indigenous transmission of 2 of the 3 types of wild
poliovirus (type 2 in 2015, after the last reported case in 1999, and type 3 in 2019, after the last reported case in 2012). The herd immunity level will be denoted
q. Recall that, for a stable state: :R_0 \cdot S = 1. In turn, :R_0=\frac{N}{S} = \frac{\mu N \operatorname E(T_L)}{\mu N \operatorname E[\min(T_L,T_S)]} = \frac{\operatorname E(T_L)}{\operatorname E[\min(T_L, T_S)]}, which is approximately: :\frac{\operatorname \operatorname E(T_L)}{\operatorname \operatorname E(T_S)} = 1+\frac{\lambda}{\mu} = \frac{\beta N }{v}.
S will be (1 −
q), since
q is the proportion of the population that is immune and
q +
S must equal one (since in this simplified model, everyone is either susceptible or immune). Then: : \begin{align} & R_0 \cdot (1-q) = 1, \\[6pt] & 1-q = \frac {1} {R_0}, \\[6pt] & q = 1 - \frac {1} {R_0}. \end{align} Remember that this is the threshold level. Die out of transmission will only occur if the proportion of immune individuals
exceeds this level due to a mass vaccination programme. We have just calculated the
critical immunization threshold (denoted
qc). It is the minimum proportion of the population that must be immunized at birth (or close to birth) in order for the infection to die out in the population. : q_c = 1 - \frac {1} {R_0}. Because the fraction of the final size of the population
p that is never infected can be defined as: : \lim_{t\to\infty} S(t) = e^{-\int_0^\infty \lambda(t) \, dt} = 1-p. Hence, : p = 1- e^{-\int_0^\infty \beta I(t) \, dt} = 1-e^{-R_0 p}. Solving for R_0, we obtain: : R_0 = \frac{-\ln(1-p)}{p}.
When mass vaccination cannot exceed the herd immunity If the vaccine used is insufficiently effective or the required coverage cannot be reached, the program may fail to exceed
qc. Such a program will protect vaccinated individuals from disease, but may change the dynamics of transmission. Suppose that a proportion of the population
q (where
q c
) is immunised at birth against an infection with R
0 > 1. The vaccination programme changes R
0 to Rq'' where : R_q = R_0(1-q) This change occurs simply because there are now fewer susceptibles in the population who can be infected.
Rq is simply
R0 minus those that would normally be infected but that cannot be now since they are immune. As a consequence of this lower
basic reproduction number, the average age of infection
A will also change to some new value
Aq in those who have been left unvaccinated. Recall the relation that linked
R0,
A and
L. Assuming that life expectancy has not changed, now: : R_q = \frac{L}{A_q}, : A_q = \frac{L}{R_q} = \frac{L}{R_0(1-q)}. But
R0 =
L/
A so: : A_q = \frac{L}{(L/A)(1-q)} = \frac{AL}{L(1-q)} = \frac {A} {1-q}. Thus, the vaccination program may raise the average age of infection, and unvaccinated individuals will experience a reduced
force of infection due to the presence of the vaccinated group. For a disease that leads to greater clinical severity in older populations, the unvaccinated proportion of the population may experience the disease relatively later in life than would occur in the absence of vaccine.
When mass vaccination exceeds the herd immunity If a vaccination program causes the proportion of immune individuals in a population to exceed the critical threshold for a significant length of time, transmission of the infectious disease in that population will stop. If elimination occurs everywhere at the same time, then this can lead to
eradication. ; Elimination : Interruption of endemic transmission of an infectious disease, which occurs if each infected individual infects less than one other, is achieved by maintaining vaccination coverage to keep the proportion of immune individuals above the critical immunization threshold. ; Eradication : Elimination everywhere at the same time such that the infectious agent dies out (for example,
smallpox and
rinderpest). == Reliability ==