| Literature DB >> 32457142 |
Chad R Wells1, Amit Huppert2,3, Meagan C Fitzpatrick1,4, Abhishek Pandey1, Baruch Velan2, Burton H Singer5, Chris T Bauch6, Alison P Galvani1.
Abstract
Regions with insufficient vaccination have hindered worldwide poliomyelitis eradication, as they are vulnerable to sporadic outbreaks through reintroduction of the disease. Despite Israel's having been declared polio-free in 1988, a routine sewage surveillance program detected polio in 2013. To curtail transmission, the Israel Ministry of Health launched a vaccine campaign to vaccinate children-who had only received the inactivated polio vaccine-with the oral polio vaccine (OPV). Determining the degree of prosocial motivation in vaccination behavior is challenging because vaccination typically provides direct benefits to the individual as well as indirect benefits to the community by curtailing transmission. However, the Israel OPV campaign provides a unique and excellent opportunity to quantify and model prosocial vaccination as its primary objective was to avert transmission. Using primary survey data and a game-theoretical model, we examine and quantify prosocial behavior during the OPV campaign. We found that the observed vaccination behavior in the Israeli OPV campaign is attributable to prosocial behavior and heterogeneous perceived risk of paralysis based on the individual's comprehension of the prosocial nature of the campaign. We also found that the benefit of increasing comprehension of the prosocial nature of the campaign would be limited if even 24% of the population acts primarily from self-interest, as greater vaccination coverage provides no personal utility to them. Our results suggest that to improve coverage, communication efforts should also focus on alleviating perceived fears surrounding the vaccine.Entities:
Keywords: altruism; disease prevention; game theory; vaccination motives
Year: 2020 PMID: 32457142 PMCID: PMC7293608 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1922746117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205
The degree of prosociality during the 2013 OPV vaccination campaign estimated from the game-theory model and results from the survey*
| National | Orthodox | Religious | Traditional | Secular | Arab | |
| Vaccination coverage (ν) | 72.1% | 78.1% | 63.6% | 72.3% | 63.7% | 88.0% |
| Comprehended campaign as prosocial (α) | 54.8% | 48.4% | 56.2% | 63.6% | 66.8% | 25.5% |
| Estimated comprehensors that are prosocial (ρ) | 69.7% | 74.5% | 61.6% | 71.1% | 63.1% | 80.2% |
| Minimum strength of prosocial behavior (κ) | 0.24 | 0.27 | 0.21 | 0.24 | 0.21 | 0.32 |
| Estimated strength of prosocial behavior (κ) | 0.59 | 0.63 | 0.53 | 0.59 | 0.53 | 0.72 |
| Sensitivity to infection (γ) | 0.076 | 0.085 | 0.064 | 0.076 | 0.064 | 0.101 |
We assumed a vaccine efficacy of 63%, 94% of the population is eligible for vaccination, the perceived basic reproductive number to be 2.24, the relative risk for an unaware individuals to be ∼2.14 × 10−4, the relative risk for an aware individual to be 0.001, and evaluating the probability of infection as R0(1 − εν)1/γ/(R0+(1 − εν)1/γ).
The percentage of the eligible population that is prosocial for the different sociocultural groups was estimated based on the assumption that unaware individuals were ∼1.22 times more likely to vaccinate than an aware individual (). Since 94% of the population was assumed eligible for vaccination (i.e., ω = 0.94), ωαρ represents the proportion of prosocials reported in the survey.
Estimated using Eq. .
Fig. 1.The vaccination coverages predicted by the Nash equilibrium for various sensitivities to infection (γ) among the aware and unaware groups for homogeneous relative perceived risk (green) and heterogeneous relative perceived risk (purple). (A) The predicted national vaccination coverage, (B) the vaccination coverage among aware individuals, (C) the vaccination coverage among unaware individuals, (D) the vaccination coverage among prosocials, and (E) the vaccination coverage among individualists. (F) The likelihood of achieving the national 72% vaccination coverage obtained in the survey. The results are based on 2,500 samples of relative risk of paralysis and R0 using the sigmoidal function. For the heterogeneous risk, the relative risk of the aware groups was assumed to be ∼4.7 times larger than the relative risk of the unaware group, having the same average perceived risk as the homogeneous population. The proportion of prosocial behavior in the aware population was 69.7% (ρ = 0.697) and the level of comprehension was 54.8% (α = 0.548). The vaccine efficacy was 63% (ε = 0.63), with 94% of the population being eligible for vaccination (ω = 0.94). We used the minimum strength of prosocial behavior (κ) in the prosocial population (Eq. ) for the sampled perceived relative risk and basic reproductive number, as well as the value of the sensitivity to infection. The area under the curve is denoted by AUC.
Fig. 2.The vaccination coverage predicted by the Nash equilibrium across varying proportions of aware (α) and prosocial (ρ) individuals in Israel, given unaware individuals update their perceived relative risk. The blue denotes a coverage greater than baseline, red indicates a coverage lower than baseline, and white represents the baseline coverage of (A–C) 72% or (D) 64%. (A) The 72% vaccination coverage is based on the estimated κ = 0.59 and γ = 0.076 and the parameters values described in . (B) The relative risk is relatively independent of awareness. We assumed that the perceived relative risk of the aware (r) was 1% greater than the relative perceived risk for an unaware individual (r). (C) The strength of prosocial behavior for prosocial individuals was assumed to be κ = 0.24 (i.e., the minimum estimate). (D) A reduced perceived likelihood of infection, where γ = 0.064 and the Nash equilibrium is 64%. The value of the perceived basic reproductive number, relative risk for the aware and unaware, and the fraction of the population eligible for vaccination are described in .