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TWO MODES OF VACCINATION PROGRAM IN CONTROLLED SIR MODEL. / Gubar, E.; Zhitkova, E.; Kupchinenko, E.; Petriakova, N.

в: Contributions to Game Theory and Management, Том 9, 2015, стр. 84-98.

Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданияхстатьяРецензирование

Harvard

Gubar, E, Zhitkova, E, Kupchinenko, E & Petriakova, N 2015, 'TWO MODES OF VACCINATION PROGRAM IN CONTROLLED SIR MODEL', Contributions to Game Theory and Management, Том. 9, стр. 84-98. <http://www.mathnet.ru/php/archive.phtml?wshow=paper&jrnid=cgtm&paperid=259&option_lang=rus>

APA

Vancouver

Gubar E, Zhitkova E, Kupchinenko E, Petriakova N. TWO MODES OF VACCINATION PROGRAM IN CONTROLLED SIR MODEL. Contributions to Game Theory and Management. 2015;9:84-98.

Author

Gubar, E. ; Zhitkova, E. ; Kupchinenko, E. ; Petriakova, N. / TWO MODES OF VACCINATION PROGRAM IN CONTROLLED SIR MODEL. в: Contributions to Game Theory and Management. 2015 ; Том 9. стр. 84-98.

BibTeX

@article{f2636d4952c54a49b4a675e71aa901a5,
title = "TWO MODES OF VACCINATION PROGRAM IN CONTROLLED SIR MODEL",
abstract = "The problem of forming herd immunity to an infectious disease, i.e. influenza, which is optimal to the population, is often considered as a modification of the classical Susceptible-Infected-Recovery model. However the annual vaccination of the total population is quite expensive and is not obligatory for every individual. Any agent in population has a choice: whether or not to participate in the vaccination program. So each epidemic season society confronts a dilemma: how to maintain the necessary immunization level which is subject to individual choice. Apparently each available alternative incurs different costs and benefits for an individual agent and the population in total. We compare social and individual benefits and expenses in two cases: optimal vaccination policy is used to preserve the optimal herd immunity; agents participate in the vaccination campaign, considering only individual benefits. It's supposed that agent choices do not depend only on the cost generated by agents' choices during the epidemic period. Agents also take into account all available information, received from neighbors, media and former experience. Every agent compares it's own preferences and the alternatives, chosen by neighbors and can update its choice every season. We study the influence of information about previous epidemics on the decision making process. We investigate an optimal control problem to study the optimal vaccination behavior during an epidemic period based on classical Susceptible-Infected-Recovery model and present a procedure for making vaccination decisions.",
author = "E. Gubar and E. Zhitkova and E. Kupchinenko and N. Petriakova",
year = "2015",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
pages = "84--98",
journal = "Contributions to Game Theory and Management",
issn = "2310-2608",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - TWO MODES OF VACCINATION PROGRAM IN CONTROLLED SIR MODEL

AU - Gubar, E.

AU - Zhitkova, E.

AU - Kupchinenko, E.

AU - Petriakova, N.

PY - 2015

Y1 - 2015

N2 - The problem of forming herd immunity to an infectious disease, i.e. influenza, which is optimal to the population, is often considered as a modification of the classical Susceptible-Infected-Recovery model. However the annual vaccination of the total population is quite expensive and is not obligatory for every individual. Any agent in population has a choice: whether or not to participate in the vaccination program. So each epidemic season society confronts a dilemma: how to maintain the necessary immunization level which is subject to individual choice. Apparently each available alternative incurs different costs and benefits for an individual agent and the population in total. We compare social and individual benefits and expenses in two cases: optimal vaccination policy is used to preserve the optimal herd immunity; agents participate in the vaccination campaign, considering only individual benefits. It's supposed that agent choices do not depend only on the cost generated by agents' choices during the epidemic period. Agents also take into account all available information, received from neighbors, media and former experience. Every agent compares it's own preferences and the alternatives, chosen by neighbors and can update its choice every season. We study the influence of information about previous epidemics on the decision making process. We investigate an optimal control problem to study the optimal vaccination behavior during an epidemic period based on classical Susceptible-Infected-Recovery model and present a procedure for making vaccination decisions.

AB - The problem of forming herd immunity to an infectious disease, i.e. influenza, which is optimal to the population, is often considered as a modification of the classical Susceptible-Infected-Recovery model. However the annual vaccination of the total population is quite expensive and is not obligatory for every individual. Any agent in population has a choice: whether or not to participate in the vaccination program. So each epidemic season society confronts a dilemma: how to maintain the necessary immunization level which is subject to individual choice. Apparently each available alternative incurs different costs and benefits for an individual agent and the population in total. We compare social and individual benefits and expenses in two cases: optimal vaccination policy is used to preserve the optimal herd immunity; agents participate in the vaccination campaign, considering only individual benefits. It's supposed that agent choices do not depend only on the cost generated by agents' choices during the epidemic period. Agents also take into account all available information, received from neighbors, media and former experience. Every agent compares it's own preferences and the alternatives, chosen by neighbors and can update its choice every season. We study the influence of information about previous epidemics on the decision making process. We investigate an optimal control problem to study the optimal vaccination behavior during an epidemic period based on classical Susceptible-Infected-Recovery model and present a procedure for making vaccination decisions.

UR - https://www.elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=23745989

M3 - Article

VL - 9

SP - 84

EP - 98

JO - Contributions to Game Theory and Management

JF - Contributions to Game Theory and Management

SN - 2310-2608

ER -

ID: 76937200