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Interplay Between Risk Perception, Behavior, and COVID-19 Spread

journal contribution
posted on 2023-02-16, 01:01 authored by Philipp Doenges, Joel Wagner, Sebastian Contreras, Emil N Iftekhar, Simon Bauer, Sebastian B Mohr, Jonas Dehning, Andre Calero Valdez, Mirjam Kretzschmar, Michael Maes, Kai Nagel, Viola Priesemann
Pharmaceutical and non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) have been crucial for controlling COVID-19. They are complemented by voluntary health-protective behavior, building a complex interplay between risk perception, behavior, and disease spread. We studied how voluntary health-protective behavior and vaccination willingness impact the long-term dynamics. We analyzed how different levels of mandatory NPIs determine how individuals use their leeway for voluntary actions. If mandatory NPIs are too weak, COVID-19 incidence will surge, implying high morbidity and mortality before individuals react; if they are too strong, one expects a rebound wave once restrictions are lifted, challenging the transition to endemicity. Conversely, moderate mandatory NPIs give individuals time and room to adapt their level of caution, mitigating disease spread effectively. When complemented with high vaccination rates, this also offers a robust way to limit the impacts of the Omicron variant of concern. Altogether, our work highlights the importance of appropriate mandatory NPIs to maximise the impact of individual voluntary actions in pandemic control.

History

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PHYSICS

Volume

10

Article number

ARTN 842180

ISSN

2296-424X

eISSN

2296-424X

Language

English

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA

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