How disease risk awareness modulates transmission: coupling infectious disease models with behavioural dynamics

Author:

Cascante-Vega Jaime12ORCID,Torres-Florez Samuel1ORCID,Cordovez Juan1,Santos-Vega Mauricio1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Departamento de Ingeniería Biomédica, Grupo de Investigación en Biología Matemática y Computacional, Universidad de los Andes, Bogotá D.C., Colombia

2. Department of Environmental Health Sciences, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, NY 10032, USA

Abstract

Epidemiological models often assume that individuals do not change their behaviour or that those aspects are implicitly incorporated in parameters in the models. Typically, these assumptions are included in the contact rate between infectious and susceptible individuals. However, adaptive behaviours are expected to emerge and play an important role in the transmission dynamics across populations. Here, we propose a theoretical framework to couple transmission dynamics with behavioural dynamics due to infection awareness. We modelled the dynamics of social behaviour using a game theory framework, which is then coupled with an epidemiological model that captures the disease dynamics by assuming that individuals are aware of the actual epidemiological state to reduce their contacts. Results from the mechanistic model show that as individuals increase their awareness, the steady-state value of the final fraction of infected individuals in a susceptible-infected-susceptible (SIS) model decreases. We also incorporate theoretical contact networks, having the awareness parameter dependent on global or local contacts. Results show that even when individuals increase their awareness of the disease, the spatial structure itself defines the steady state.

Funder

International Development Research Centre

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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