Disparity in socio-economic status explains the pattern of self-medication of antibiotics in India: understanding from game-theoretic perspective

Author:

Malik Bhawna1ORCID,Hasan Farooqui Habib23,Bhattacharyya Samit1

Affiliation:

1. Disease Modelling Lab, Mathematics, School of Natural Sciences, Shiv Nadar University, Greater Noida, India

2. Indian Institute of Public Health, Public Health Foundation of India, Delhi, India

3. College of Medicine, Qatar University, Doha, Qatar

Abstract

The emergence of antimicrobial resistance has raised great concern for public health in many lower-income countries including India. Socio-economic determinants like poverty, health expenditure and awareness accelerate this emergence by influencing individuals' attitudes and healthcare practices such asself-medication. This self-medication practice is highly prevalent in many countries, where antibiotics are available without prescriptions. Thus, complex dynamics of drug- resistance driven by economy, human behaviour, and disease epidemiology poses a serious threat to the community, which has been less emphasized in prior studies. Here, we formulate a game-theoretic model of human choices in self-medication integrating economic growth and disease transmission processes. We show that this adaptive behaviour emerges spontaneously in the population through a self-reinforcing process and continual feedback from the economy, resulting in the emergence of resistance as externalities of human choice under resource constraints situations. We identify that the disparity between social-optimum and individual interest in self-medication is primarily driven by the effectiveness of treatment, health awareness and public health interventions. Frequent multiple-peaks of resistant strains are also observed when individuals imitate others more readily and self-medication is more likely. Our model exemplifies that timely public health intervention for financial risk protection, and antibiotic stewardship policies can improve the epidemiological situation and prevent economic collapse.

Funder

Science and Engineering Research Board

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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