Riding the waves from epidemic to endemic: Viral mutations, immunological change and policy responses

D. Grass, S. Wrzaczek*, J. P. Caulkins, G. Feichtinger, R. F. Hartl, P. M. Kort, Michael Kuhn, A. Prskawetz, M. Sanchez-Romero, A. Seidl

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

Abstract

Nonpharmaceutical interventions (NPI) are an important tool for countering pandemics such as COVID-19. Some are cheap; others disrupt economic, educational, and social activity. The latter force governments to balance the health benefits of reduced infection and death against broader lockdown-induced societal costs. A literature has developed modeling how to optimally adjust lockdown intensity as an epidemic evolves. This paper extends that literature by augmenting the classic SIR model with additional states and flows capturing decay over time in vaccine-conferred immunity, the possibility that mutations create variants that erode immunity, and that protection against infection erodes faster than protecting against severe illness. As in past models, we find that small changes in parameter values can tip the optimal response between very different solutions, but the extensions considered here create new types of solutions. In some instances, it can be optimal to incur perpetual epidemic waves even if the uncontrolled infection prevalence would settle down to a stable intermediate level.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)46-65
Number of pages20
JournalTheoretical Population Biology
Volume156
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2024

Keywords

  • COVID-19
  • Dynamic optimization
  • SIR models
  • Vaccinations

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