Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario, Canada.
Epidemics. 2012 Aug;4(3):139-51. doi: 10.1016/j.epidem.2012.06.002. Epub 2012 Jul 4.
Personal experiences with past infection events, or perceived vaccine failures and complications, are known to drive vaccine uptake. We coupled a model of individual vaccinating decisions, influenced by these drivers, with a contact network model of influenza transmission dynamics. The impact of non-influenzal influenza-like illness (niILI) on decision-making was also incorporated: it was possible for individuals to mistake niILI for true influenza. Our objectives were to (1) evaluate the impact of personal experiences on vaccine coverage; (2) understand the impact of niILI on behaviour-incidence dynamics; (3) determine which factors influence vaccine coverage stability; and (4) determine whether vaccination strategies can become correlated on the network in the absence of social influence. We found that certain aspects of personal experience can significantly impact behaviour-incidence dynamics. For instance, longer term memory for past events had a strong stabilising effect on vaccine coverage dynamics, although it could either increase or decrease average vaccine coverage depending on whether memory of past infections or past vaccine failures dominated. When vaccine immunity wanes slowly, vaccine coverage is low and stable, and infection incidence is also very low, unless the effects of niILI are ignored. Strategy correlations can occur in the absence of imitation, on account of the neighbour-neighbour transmission of infection and history-dependent decision making. Finally, niILI weakens the behaviour-incidence coupling and therefore tends to stabilise dynamics, as well as breaking up strategy correlations. Behavioural feedbacks, and the quality of self-diagnosis of niILI, may need to be considered in future programs adopting "universal" flu vaccines conferring long-term immunity. Public health interventions that focus on reminding individuals about their previous influenza infections, as well as communicating facts about vaccine efficacy and the difference between influenza and niILI, may be an effective way to increase vaccine coverage and prevent unexpected drops in coverage.
个人对既往感染事件或认为的疫苗失败和并发症的经历,已知会影响疫苗接种率。我们将个体接种决策模型与流感传播动力学的接触网络模型相结合,这些决策受到这些驱动因素的影响。还结合了非流感样疾病(niILI)对决策的影响:个体可能将 niILI 误诊为真正的流感。我们的目标是:(1)评估个人经历对疫苗接种率的影响;(2)了解 niILI 对行为发病动态的影响;(3)确定哪些因素会影响疫苗接种率的稳定性;(4)确定在没有社会影响的情况下,网络上的疫苗接种策略是否会相关。我们发现,个人经历的某些方面会对行为发病动态产生重大影响。例如,对过去事件的长期记忆对疫苗接种率动态有很强的稳定作用,尽管它可能会增加或降低平均疫苗接种率,具体取决于过去感染或过去疫苗失败的记忆是否占主导地位。当疫苗免疫力减弱缓慢时,疫苗接种率低且稳定,感染发病率也非常低,除非忽略 niILI 的影响。由于感染的邻居间传播和依赖历史的决策,在没有模仿的情况下,策略相关性也会发生。最后,niILI 削弱了行为发病的耦合作用,从而使动力学趋于稳定,同时打破了策略相关性。在未来采用具有长期免疫作用的“通用”流感疫苗的项目中,可能需要考虑行为反馈和对 niILI 的自我诊断质量。专注于提醒个人既往流感感染情况,以及传播疫苗功效和流感与 niILI 之间差异的公共卫生干预措施,可能是提高疫苗接种率和预防接种率意外下降的有效方法。