Insights from economicepidemiology

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Insights from economicepidemiology

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Title: Insights from economicepidemiology


1
Insights from economic-epidemiology
Ramanan Laxminarayan Resources for the Future,
Washington DC
2
Economic Epidemiology
  • Mathematical conceptualization of the interplay
    between economics, human behavior and disease
    ecology to improve our understanding of
  • the emergence, persistence and spread of
    infectious agents
  • optimal strategies and policies to control their
    spread

3
Economics
  • Measuring health outcomes
  • Provides a single metric to compare costs and
    benefits both contemporaneously and over time.
  • Incorporating behavior
  • Can alter conclusions reached by purely
    epidemiological models by incorporating behavior.
  • Comparing public policies
  • Increases relevance for application in the real
    world.

4
Overview
  • Individual response and disease
  • Incentives of institutions (to invest in hospital
    infection control)
  • Optimal allocation of resources between two
    regions (or hospitals)

5
Individual response and disease
  • Vaccinations
  • Insufficient incentives to vaccinate prevent
    attainment of herd immunity thresholds
  • Drug resistance
  • Insufficient incentives to make appropriate use
    leads to ineffective drugs and increasing
    prevalence
  • Testing
  • Private testing behavior adds to public
    information on disease prevalence

6
Rational epidemics
  • Prevalence response elasticity
  • Hazard rate into infection of susceptibles is a
    decreasing function of prevalence (opposite of
    epidemiological model predictions)
  • Application to HIV
  • Application to Measles

7
Geoffard and Philipson, Int. Econ. Rev., 1996
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Blower et al, Science, 2000
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Blower et al, Science, 2000
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When should governments intervene?
  • Disease prevalence increases adoption of public
    programs
  • Impact of public program may be zero if
    prevalence has already reached an individuals
    threshold prevalence
  • Paradoxically, the role of government subsidies
    is lowest when prevalence is highest since
    individuals will protect themselves regardless

11
Philipson, NBER, 1999
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Public price subsidies
  • Can price subsidies or mandatory programs achieve
    eradication?
  • Increase in demand by folks covered by the
    program lowers the incentives to vaccinate for
    those outside the program
  • Do monopolistic vaccine manufacturers have an
    incentive to eradicate disease?
  • Market for their product would disappear with
    eradication

Geoffard and Philipson, Int Econ Rev, 1997
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Disease Complementarities
  • Incentive to invest in prevention against one
    cause of death depends positively on probability
    of dying from other causes
  • Intervening to prevent mortality not only
    prevents a death but also increases incentives
    for the family to fight other diseases

15
Dow et al, Am Econ Rev, 1999
16
Does the theory fit the facts?
  • Do individuals actually observe prevalence?
  • Why dont we see prevalence responsiveness at
    work everywhere?
  • Importance of observational learning (herd
    behavior)?

17
Stoneburner and Low-Beer, Science, 2004
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Stoneburner and Low-Beer, Science, 2004
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Stoneburner and Low-Beer, Science, 2004
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NNIS Data, 2004
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Optimal infection control
Infection dynamics are given by
Equilibrium prevalence is given by
Smith, Levin, Laxminarayan (PNAS, 2005)
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Objective
Minimize costs of infection control and infections
Local minima, if they exist, are solutions to
Smith, Levin, Laxminarayan (PNAS, 2005)
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Smith, Levin, Laxminarayan (PNAS, 2005)
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Strategic interactions with other hospitals
The focal institution decides how much to invest
in HIC by minimizing the net present value of
discounted costs of HIC and hospitalization
Smith, Levin, Laxminarayan (PNAS, 2005)
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Implications for policy
  • Dutch experience frequency of MRSA infections is
    lt 0.5 after an intensive search-and-destroy
    campaign, compared with 50 in some areas
  • In Siouxland (Iowa, Nebraska, S. Dakota), an
    epidemic of VRE was reversed
  • Regionally coordinated response to epidemic
  • Does this explain higher prevalence of ARB in
    areas with high concentration of health care
    institutions?

29
Rowthorn, Laxminarayan, Gilligan Submitted
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Rowthorn, Laxminarayan, Gilligan Submitted
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Rowthorn, Laxminarayan, Gilligan Submitted
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Rowthorn, Laxminarayan, Gilligan Submitted
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Allocating resources
  • Expenditure on drugs is subject to the budget
    constraint
  • Finance is not transferable through time.
  • Problem is to choose F1and F2 so as to minimise
    the following integral

Rowthorn, Laxminarayan, Gilligan Submitted
34
Optimal allocation
  • At low levels of infection in both populations
  • Preferentially treat population with higher
    transmission coefficient because of greater
    economic value associated with greater potential
    to prevent secondary infections
  • At high levels of infection
  • Preferentially treat population with lower levels
    of infection since the higher probability of
    re-infection in high infection populations
    reduces the economic value of treatment

Rowthorn, Laxminarayan, Gilligan Submitted
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Rowthorn, Laxminarayan, Gilligan Submitted
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Closing thoughts
  • Epidemiological models take little or no account
    of economic constraints or incentives faced by
    individuals or institutions
  • Economic models mostly ignore the spatial and
    temporal dynamics of disease.
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