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Pré-Publication, Document De Travail Année : 2015

Individual vaccination as Nash equilibrium in a SIR model: the interplay between individual optimization and societal policies

Résumé

The vaccination against non recurrent epidemics is seldom compul-sory but remains one of the most classical means to fight epidemic propagation. However recent debates concerning the innocuity of vaccines and their risk with respect to the risk of the epidemic itself lead to severe vaccination campaign failures and new mass behaviors appeared driven by individual self-interest. Prompted by this context we analyze, in a Susceptible-Infected-Recovered (SIR) model, whether egocentric individuals can reach an equilibrium with the rest of the society. Using techniques from the "Mean Field Games" theory, we show that an equilibrium exists and characterizes completely the individ-ual best vaccination strategy. We also compare with a strategy based only on overall societal optimization and exhibit a situation with non-negative price of anarchy. Finally, we apply the theory to the 2009-2010 Influenza A (H1N1) vaccination campaign in France and show that a group of individuals stopped vaccinating at levels that indicated a very pessimistic perception of the risk of the vaccine.
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Dates et versions

hal-01100579 , version 1 (06-01-2015)
hal-01100579 , version 2 (15-06-2015)
hal-01100579 , version 3 (18-09-2015)

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  • HAL Id : hal-01100579 , version 1

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Laetitia Laguzet, Gabriel Turinici. Individual vaccination as Nash equilibrium in a SIR model: the interplay between individual optimization and societal policies. 2015. ⟨hal-01100579v1⟩
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