| Literature DB >> 25233829 |
Charles Perrings1, Carlos Castillo-Chavez, Gerardo Chowell, Peter Daszak, Eli P Fenichel, David Finnoff, Richard D Horan, A Marm Kilpatrick, Ann P Kinzig, Nicolai V Kuminoff, Simon Levin, Benjamin Morin, Katherine F Smith, Michael Springborn.
Abstract
Mathematical epidemiology, one of the oldest and richest areas in mathematical biology, has significantly enhanced our understanding of how pathogens emerge, evolve, and spread. Classical epidemiological models, the standard for predicting and managing the spread of infectious disease, assume that contacts between susceptible and infectious individuals depend on their relative frequency in the population. The behavioral factors that underpin contact rates are not generally addressed. There is, however, an emerging a class of models that addresses the feedbacks between infectious disease dynamics and the behavioral decisions driving host contact. Referred to as "economic epidemiology" or "epidemiological economics," the approach explores the determinants of decisions about the number and type of contacts made by individuals, using insights and methods from economics. We show how the approach has the potential both to improve predictions of the course of infectious disease, and to support development of novel approaches to infectious disease management.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25233829 PMCID: PMC4366543 DOI: 10.1007/s10393-014-0963-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecohealth ISSN: 1612-9202 Impact factor: 3.184
Figure 1The effect of disease risk mitigation through selective mixing on disease prevalence and the duration of an epidemic. Solid lines show prevalence and duration where susceptible individuals mix with other individuals randomly (proportional mixing). Dashed lines show prevalence and duration where susceptible individuals avoid mixing with infected and infectious individuals (selective mixing).
Figure 2The symmetry between disease risk mitigation through contact reduction and disease risk mitigation through selective mixing. The upper panel indicates the timing and level of optimal contact reduction by susceptible individuals under each strategy (contact reduction is zero under a selective mixing strategy). The lower panel indicates the timing and level of effort committed by susceptible individuals to avoiding infected/infectious individuals under each strategy (avoidance effort is zero under a contact reduction strategy).