Optimal public health intervention in a behavioural vaccination model: the interplay between seasonality, behaviour and latency period

Author:

Buonomo Bruno1,Della Marca Rossella2,d’Onofrio Alberto3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mathematics and Applications, University of Naples Federico II, via Cintia, Naples, Italy

2. Department of Mathematical, Physical and Computer Sciences, University of Parma, Parco Area delle Scienze, Parma, Italy

3. International Prevention Research Institute, Cours Lafayette, Lyon, France

Abstract

AbstractHesitancy and refusal of vaccines preventing childhood diseases are spreading due to ‘pseudo-rational’ behaviours: parents overweigh real and imaginary side effects of vaccines. Nonetheless, the ‘Public Health System’ (PHS) may enact public campaigns to favour vaccine uptake. To determine the optimal time profiles for such campaigns, we apply the optimal control theory to an extension of the susceptible-infectious-removed (SIR)-based behavioural vaccination model by d’Onofrio et al. (2012, PLoS ONE, 7, e45653). The new model is of susceptible-exposed-infectious-removed (SEIR) type under seasonal fluctuations of the transmission rate. Our objective is to minimize the total costs of the disease: the disease burden, the vaccination costs and a less usual cost: the economic burden to enact the PHS campaigns. We apply the Pontryagin minimum principle and numerically explore the impact of seasonality, human behaviour and latency rate on the control and spread of the target disease. We focus on two noteworthy case studies: the low (resp. intermediate) relative perceived risk of vaccine side effects and relatively low (resp. very low) speed of imitation. One general result is that seasonality may produce a remarkable impact on PHS campaigns aimed at controlling, via an increase of the vaccination uptake, the spread of a target infectious disease. In particular, a higher amplitude of the seasonal variation produces a higher effort and this, in turn, beneficially impacts the induced vaccine uptake since the larger is the strength of seasonality, the longer the vaccine propensity remains large. However, such increased effort is not able to fully compensate the action of seasonality on the prevalence.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Applied Mathematics,Pharmacology,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Modeling and Simulation,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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3. Vaccination games and imitation dynamics with memory;Chaos: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Nonlinear Science;2023-03-01

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