Interplay between cost and effectiveness in influenza vaccine uptake: A vaccination game approach

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Abstract

Pre-emptive vaccination is regarded as one of the most protective measures to control influenza outbreak. There are mainly two types of influenza viruses-influenza A and B with several subtypes-that are commonly found to circulate among humans. The traditional trivalent (TIV) flu vaccine targets two strains of influenza A and one strain of influenza B. The quadrivalent (QIV) vaccine targets one extra B virus strain that ensures better protection against influenza; however, the use of QIV vaccine can be costly, hence impose an extra financial burden to society. This scenario might create a dilemma in choosing vaccine types at the individual level. This article endeavours to explain such a dilemma through the framework of a vaccination game, where individuals can opt for one of the three options: choose either of QIV or TIV vaccine or none. Our approach presumes a mean-field framework of a vaccination game in an infinite and well-mixed population, entangling the disease spreading process of influenza with the coevolution of two types of vaccination decision-making processes taking place before an epidemic season. We conduct a series of numerical simulations as an attempt to illustrate different scenarios. The framework has been validated by the so-called multi-agent simulation (MAS) approach.

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APA

Rajib Arefin, M., Masaki, T., Ariful Kabir, K. M., & Tanimoto, J. (2019). Interplay between cost and effectiveness in influenza vaccine uptake: A vaccination game approach. Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, 475(2232). https://doi.org/10.1098/rspa.2019.0608

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