4.8 Article

Interacting regional policies in containing a disease

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2021520118

关键词

contagion; network; quarantine; lockdown; coordination

资金

  1. Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) Division of Science Research Computing Group at Harvard University
  2. NSF [SES-1629446, SES-2018554]
  3. RAPID [2029880]
  4. Alfred P. Sloan foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The effectiveness of regional quarantine policies depends on the interaction network, detection delay of infections, and government control; proactive measures triggered by neighboring infection rates are crucial for containment.
Regional quarantine policies, in which a portion of a population surrounding infections is locked down, are an important tool to contain disease. However, jurisdictional governments- such as cities, counties, states, and countries-act with minimal coordination across borders. We show that a regional quarantine policy's effectiveness depends on whether 1) the network of interactions satisfies a growth balance condition, 2) infections have a short delay in detection, and 3) the government has control over and knowledge of the necessary parts of the network (no leakage of behaviors). As these conditions generally fail to be satisfied, especially when interactions cross borders, we show that substantial improvements are possible if governments are outward looking and proactive: triggering quarantines in reaction to neighbors' infection rates, in some cases even before infections are detected internally. We also show that even a few lax governments-those that wait for nontrivial internal infection rates before quarantining-impose substantial costs on the whole system. Our results illustrate the importance of understanding contagion across policy borders and offer a starting point in designing proactive policies for decentralized jurisdictions.

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