The unequal effects of the health–economy trade-off during the COVID-19 pandemic
Despite the global impact of the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic, the question of whether mandated interventions have similar economic and public health effects as spontaneous behavioural change remains unresolved. Addressing this question, and understanding differential effects across socioeconom...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature human behaviour 2024-02, Vol.8 (2), p.264-275 |
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creator | Pangallo, Marco Aleta, Alberto del Rio-Chanona, R. Maria Pichler, Anton Martín-Corral, David Chinazzi, Matteo Lafond, François Ajelli, Marco Moro, Esteban Moreno, Yamir Vespignani, Alessandro Farmer, J. Doyne |
description | Despite the global impact of the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic, the question of whether mandated interventions have similar economic and public health effects as spontaneous behavioural change remains unresolved. Addressing this question, and understanding differential effects across socioeconomic groups, requires building quantitative and fine-grained mechanistic models. Here we introduce a data-driven, granular, agent-based model that simulates epidemic and economic outcomes across industries, occupations and income levels. We validate the model by reproducing key outcomes of the first wave of coronavirus disease 2019 in the New York metropolitan area. The key mechanism coupling the epidemic and economic modules is the reduction in consumption due to fear of infection. In counterfactual experiments, we show that a similar trade-off between epidemic and economic outcomes exists both when individuals change their behaviour due to fear of infection and when non-pharmaceutical interventions are imposed. Low-income workers, who perform in-person occupations in customer-facing industries, face the strongest trade-off.
The authors construct a model that captures both health and economic aspects of the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic, and uncover trade-offs between epidemic and economic outcomes both when individuals change their behaviour due to fear of infection and when non-pharmaceutical interventions are imposed. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1038/s41562-023-01747-x |
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subjects | 4014/159 4014/2801 692/699/255 Behavior change Behavioral Sciences Biomedical and Life Sciences Change agents Coronaviruses COVID-19 Economic factors Epidemics Experimental Psychology Fear & phobias Health behavior Health education Humans Infections Intervention Life Sciences Microeconomics Neurosciences New York Occupations Pandemics Pandemics - prevention & control Personality and Social Psychology Public Health |
title | The unequal effects of the health–economy trade-off during the COVID-19 pandemic |
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