
The present study has shown that on the level of the parasitic system the epidemic process is a biological system, wherein the host population serves as the internal regulator, the mechanism of transmission serves as the external regulator and the parasite population, as the regulated object. The biological regulating mechanisms of the epidemic process have fundamental differences in the groups of infectious with various mechanisms of transmission, and the specific nature of the mechanism of transmission determines the peculiar features of the biological mechanism which governs the self-regulation of the epidemic process. In contrast, on a higher level of the organization of the epidemic process, i. e. on the level of the socio-ecological system, the epidemic process is a biosocial system, wherein the human society serves as the regulator, the parasitic system serves as the regulated object and the mechanism of transmission plays the role of the filter which determines the scope of social factors, most important in the regulation of the epidemic process in a given infection. The spontaneous regulation of the epidemic process is the freed forward channel from the regulator to the regulated object, and the controlled regulation is the feedback channel.
Ecology, Genotype, Virulence, Systems Theory, Disease Vectors, Social Environment, Communicable Diseases, Disease Outbreaks, Feedback, Host-Parasite Interactions, Phenotype, Parasitic Diseases, Animals, Humans, Parasites
Ecology, Genotype, Virulence, Systems Theory, Disease Vectors, Social Environment, Communicable Diseases, Disease Outbreaks, Feedback, Host-Parasite Interactions, Phenotype, Parasitic Diseases, Animals, Humans, Parasites
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