Litcius/Paper detail

Chasing up and locking down the virus: Optimal pandemic interventions within a network

Michael Freiberger, Dieter Graß, Michael Kühn, Andrea Seidl, Stefan Wrzaczek

2022Journal of Public Economic Theory17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

During the COVID-19 pandemic countries invested significant amounts of resources into its containment. In early stages of the pandemic most of the (nonpharmaceutical) interventions can be classified into two groups: (i) testing and identification of infected individuals, (ii) social distancing measures to reduce the transmission probabilities. Furthermore, both groups of measures may, in principle, be targeted at certain subgroups of a networked population. To study such a problem, we propose an extension of the SIR model with additional compartments for quarantine and different courses of the disease across several network nodes. We develop the structure of the optimal allocation and study a numerical example of three symmetric regions that are subject to an asymmetric progression of the disease (starting from an initial hotspot). Key findings include that (i) for our calibrations policies are chosen in a "flattening-the-curve," avoiding hospital congestion; (ii) policies shift from containing spillovers from the hotspot initially to establishing a symmetric pattern of the disease; and (iii) testing that can be effectively targeted allows to reduce substantially the duration of the disease, hospital congestion and the total cost, both in terms of lives lost and economic costs.

Topics & Concepts

PandemicPsychological interventionSocial distancePopulationCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)H1n1 pandemicDiseaseComputer scienceEpidemic modelDistancingEconomicsOperations researchMicroeconomicsEconometricsMedicineEnvironmental healthMathematicsInfectious disease (medical specialty)PsychiatryPathologyCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesSARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 ResearchAdvanced Causal Inference Techniques