Fuqua School of Business, Duke University, 1 Towerview Drive, Durham, NC 27708, USA.
Math Biosci. 2009 Nov;222(1):1-12. doi: 10.1016/j.mbs.2009.08.002. Epub 2009 Aug 13.
This paper examines how two countries would allocate resources at the onset of an epidemic when they seek to protect their own populations by minimizing the total number of infectives over the entire time horizon. We model this situation as a game between selfish countries, where players strategically allocate their resources in order to minimize the total number of infected individuals in their respective populations during the epidemic. We study this problem when the initial number of infectives is very small, which greatly simplifies the analysis. We show in this framework that selfish countries always allocate their resources so as to bring the effective reproduction ratio below one and avoid a major outbreak. When a major outbreak is avoidable, we further identify the necessary and sufficient conditions under which the individual allocation decisions of selfish countries match the decision that a central planner would make in order to minimize the total number of infectives in the whole population (without distinguishing between countries).
本文研究了在传染病爆发时,两个国家如何通过在整个时间范围内将感染总数最小化来保护本国人口,从而分配资源。我们将这种情况建模为一个自私国家之间的博弈,其中参与者战略性地分配资源,以在传染病期间将各自国家的感染人数总数最小化。我们在感染人数初始值非常小的情况下研究了这个问题,这大大简化了分析。在这个框架中,我们表明,自私国家总是会分配资源,以使有效繁殖率低于 1 并避免大规模爆发。当可避免大规模爆发时,我们进一步确定了自私国家的个人分配决策与中央计划者做出的决策相匹配的必要和充分条件,以将整个人群中的感染人数总数最小化(不区分国家)。