Bistability of Evolutionary Stable Vaccination Strategies in the Reinfection SIRI Model

dc.contributor.author José Martins en
dc.contributor.author Alberto Pinto en
dc.date.accessioned 2017-12-27T11:39:31Z
dc.date.available 2017-12-27T11:39:31Z
dc.date.issued 2017 en
dc.description.abstract We use the reinfection SIRI epidemiological model to analyze the impact of education programs and vaccine scares on individuals decisions to vaccinate or not. The presence of the reinfection provokes the novelty of the existence of three Nash equilibria for the same level of the morbidity relative risk instead of a single Nash equilibrium as occurs in the SIR model studied by Bauch and Earn (PNAS 101:13391-13394, 2004). The existence of three Nash equilibria, with two of them being evolutionary stable, introduces two scenarios with relevant and opposite features for the same level of the morbidity relative risk: the low-vaccination scenario corresponding to the evolutionary stable vaccination strategy, where individuals will vaccinate with a low probability; and the high-vaccination scenario corresponding to the evolutionary stable vaccination strategy, where individuals will vaccinate with a high probability. We introduce the evolutionary vaccination dynamics for the SIRI model and we prove that it is bistable. The bistability of the evolutionary dynamics indicates that the damage provoked by false scares on the vaccination perceived morbidity risks can be much higher and much more persistent than in the SIR model. Furthermore, the vaccination education programs to be efficient they need to implement a mechanism to suddenly increase the vaccination coverage level. en
dc.identifier.uri http://repositorio.inesctec.pt/handle/123456789/4973
dc.identifier.uri http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11538-017-0257-6 en
dc.language eng en
dc.relation 5682 en
dc.relation 5720 en
dc.rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess en
dc.title Bistability of Evolutionary Stable Vaccination Strategies in the Reinfection SIRI Model en
dc.type article en
dc.type Publication en
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