传染病暴发期间SARS型经济效应研究

M. Brahmbhatt, Arin Dutta
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引用次数: 87

摘要

传染病暴发可通过疾病和死亡造成高昂的人员和经济代价。但是,正如2003年东亚的严重急性呼吸系统综合症(SARS)或1994年印度苏拉特爆发的鼠疫一样,它们也可能造成严重的经济中断,即使最终患病或死亡的人数相对较少。这种破坏通常是个人为避免感染而采取的不协调和恐慌的努力或预防活动的结果。本文将这些“SARS类型”的影响放在经济流行病学研究的背景下,其中对疾病风险的行为反应具有经济和流行病学后果。这篇论文特别关注了人们如何形成对疾病风险的主观概率判断。SARS爆发期间的民意调查提供了一些有启发性的证据,表明人们有时确实对感染的风险有过高的认识,或者如果感染了,就会死于这种疾病。本文讨论了行为经济学和信息级联理论的研究,这些研究可能会揭示这种偏见的起源。作者考虑公共信息策略是否有助于减少不必要的恐慌。一个初步的问题是,为什么政府似乎经常有强烈的动机隐瞒有关传染病爆发的信息。本文回顾了近年来澄清政府激励的博弈论分析。一个重要的发现是,关于可能的疾病爆发的非官方信息来源越多,政府隐瞒下降的动机就越多。研究结果表明,在全球交流广泛的现代条件下,诚实可能确实是最好的公共政策。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
On SARS Type Economic Effects During Infectious Disease Outbreaks
Infectious disease outbreaks can exact a high human and economic cost through illness and death. But, as with severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in East Asia in 2003, or the plague outbreak in Surat, India, in 1994, they can also create severe economic disruptions even when there is, ultimately, relatively little illness or death. Such disruptions are commonly the result of uncoordinated and panicky efforts by individuals to avoid becoming infected, of preventive activity. This paper places these"SARS type"effects in the context of research on economic epidemiology, in which behavioral responses to disease risk have both economic and epidemiological consequences. The paper looks in particular at how people form subjective probability judgments about disease risk. Public opinion surveys during the SARS outbreak provide suggestive evidence that people did indeed at times hold excessively high perceptions of the risk of becoming infected, or, if infected, of dying from the disease. The paper discusses research in behavioral economics and the theory of information cascades that may shed light on the origin of such biases. The authors consider whether public information strategies can help reduce unwarranted panic. A preliminary question is why governments often seem to have strong incentives to conceal information about infectious disease outbreaks. The paper reviews recent game-theoretic analysis that clarifies government incentives. An important finding is that government incentives to conceal decline the more numerous are non-official sources of information about a possible disease outbreak. The findings suggest that honesty may indeed be the best public policy under modern conditions of easy mass global communications.
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