Abstract

Managing infectious disease is among the foremost challenges for public health policy. Interpersonal contacts play a critical role in infectious disease transmission, and recent advances in epidemiological theory suggest a central role for adaptive human behaviour with respect to changing contact patterns. However, theoretical studies cannot answer the following question: are individual responses to disease of sufficient magnitude to shape epidemiological dynamics and infectious disease risk? We provide empirical evidence that Americans voluntarily reduced their time spent in public places during the 2009 A/H1N1 swine flu, and that these behavioural shifts were of a magnitude capable of reducing the total number of cases. We simulate 10 years of epidemics (2003–2012) based on mixing patterns derived from individual time-use data to show that the mixing patterns in 2009 yield the lowest number of total infections relative to if the epidemic had occurred in any of the other nine years. The World Health Organization and other public health bodies have emphasized an important role for ‘distancing’ or non-pharmaceutical interventions. Our empirical results suggest that neglect for voluntary avoidance behaviour in epidemic models may overestimate the public health benefits of public social distancing policies.

Highlights

  • Managing infectious disease is among the foremost challenges for public health policy

  • We study whether individuals engaged in epidemiological avoidance behaviour during the 2009 A/H1N1 epidemic, and if the magnitude of individual behavioural shifts was of sufficient magnitude to alter epidemiological dynamics in the USA

  • We measure the extent to which Americans engaged in voluntary avoidance behaviour during the 2009 A/H1N1 epidemic and show that such behaviour is of epidemiologically meaningful magnitude

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Summary

Introduction

Managing infectious disease is among the foremost challenges for public health policy. [17 –20], or infer potential avoidance behaviour ex post from observed epidemic outcomes [21 –23] While these studies provide empirical insights into the role of avoidance behaviour during an epidemic, no study has quantified avoidance behaviour based on observable time-use data and coupled that behavioural shift with an epidemiological model to provide an empirical estimate of the public health consequences of avoidance behaviour. We estimate voluntary avoidance behaviour during the 2009 A/H1N1 (swine) flu epidemic using a detailed dataset with daily observations on how Americans spent their time between 2003 and 2012 We use this estimate to quantify the public health impacts of such avoidance behaviour, and we show that individual voluntary avoidance behaviour was of sufficient magnitude to meaningfully alter disease dynamics and impact transmission of the A/H1N1 influenza virus

Methods
Results
Discussion
13. Perrings C et al 2014 Merging economics and
Findings
36. Brown ST et al 2011 Would school closure for the
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