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.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Brahmbhatt, Milan, Dutta, Arindam
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2008-01
Subjects:ACCIDENT, ACUTE RESPIRATORY SYNDROME, AGGRESSIVE, AIDS EPIDEMIC, AIDS PREVALENCE, AVAILABILITY OF INFORMATION, AVIAN INFLUENZA, BEHAVIOR CHANGE, BULLETIN, BURDEN OF DISEASE, CHOLERA, CITIZENS, CLINICAL DIAGNOSES, COMMUNITY HEALTH, COMPLICATIONS, CONDOM, CONDOM USE, CONDOMS, DEATHS, DEMAND FOR CONDOMS, DEMAND FOR VACCINES, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, DIAGNOSES, DISABILITY, DISASTER, DISEASE, DISEASE OUTBREAK, DISEASE OUTBREAKS, DISEASE PREVALENCE, DISEASE PREVENTION, DISEASE REPORTING, DISEASE SURVEILLANCE, DOCTORS, DRUGS, DYING, ECONOMIC GROWTH, EFFECTIVE POLICIES, EMERGING INFLUENZA PANDEMIC, ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION, EPIDEMIC, EPIDEMIC DISEASE, EPIDEMICS, EPIDEMIOLOGY, ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS, EXTREME EVENTS, FAMILIES, FATALITIES, FATALITY, FLOW OF INFORMATION, GAY MEN, GLOBAL BURDEN, GLOBAL DEVELOPMENT, GLOBAL DEVELOPMENT FINANCE, HAZARD, HEALTH AUTHORITIES, HEALTH CARE, HEALTH CARE PROFESSIONALS, HEALTH OFFICIALS, HEALTH POLICIES, HEALTH POLICY, HEALTH REGULATIONS, HEALTH RESEARCH, HEALTH SURVEILLANCE, HEALTH SYSTEM, HEALTH SYSTEMS, HEALTHY LIFE, HIGH FEVER, HIV, HOSPITAL, HOSPITALS, HUMAN CAPITAL, HUMAN HEALTH, ILLNESS, IMMUNIZATION, INDIVIDUAL CHOICES, INDIVIDUAL NEEDS, INFECTION, INFECTION RATE, INFECTIONS, INFECTIOUS DISEASE, INFECTIOUS DISEASES, INFLUENZA, INFLUENZA ACTIVITY, INFLUENZA PANDEMIC, INFLUENZA PANDEMICS, INFLUENZA VIRUS, INTERNATIONAL AGENCY, INTERNATIONAL ASSISTANCE, INTERNATIONAL POLICY, INTERVENTION, JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, JOURNALISTS, LABOR FORCE, LAM, LIFE EXPECTANCY, MALARIA, MEASLES, MEDICAL ASSISTANCE, MEDICAL CARE, MEDICAL SCHOOLS, MEDICAL SERVICES, MEDICAL TREATMENT, MILITARY MEDICINE, MINISTRY OF HEALTH, MORBIDITY, MORBIDITY AND MORTALITY, MORTALITY, MORTALITY RISK, MUMPS, NEW INFECTIONS, NUMBER OF NEW INFECTIONS, NURSING, OLD DISEASES, OUTBREAK CONTROL, PACIFIC REGION, PANDEMIC INFLUENZA, PATIENT, PATIENTS, PHARMACIES, PHYSICIAN, PHYSICIANS, PLAGUE, PNEUMONIA, POLICY BRIEF, POLICY IMPLICATIONS, POLICY LEVEL, POLICY MAKERS, POLICY RESEARCH, POLICY RESEARCH WORKING PAPER, POLIO, POLITICAL OPPOSITION, POLITICAL SUPPORT, POOR HEALTH, POSTERS, PREMATURE DEATH, PREVALENCE, PREVENTION STRATEGIES, PREVENTIVE ACTION, PREVENTIVE ACTIONS, PREVENTIVE HEALTH CARE, PROGRESS, PROPHYLAXIS, PSYCHOLOGY, PUBLIC HEALTH, PUBLIC HEALTH AUTHORITIES, PUBLIC HEALTH POLICY, PUBLIC HEALTH PROBLEM, PUBLIC INFORMATION, PUBLIC OPINION, PUBLIC PERCEPTIONS, PUBLIC POLICY, RADIO, RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS, RESEARCH PROGRAM, RESPECT, RESTAURANTS, RISK FACTORS, RISK OF INFECTION, RUBELLA, SANCTIONS, SEXUAL ACTIVITY, SEXUAL BEHAVIOR, SEXUAL PARTNERS, SEXUAL PRACTICES, SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES, SMALLPOX, SOUTH AMERICA, SPECIALISTS, SYMPTOMS, TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE, TRANSPORTATION, TV, VACCINATION, VACCINATION PROGRAM, VACCINE, VACCINES, WORK FORCE, WORKERS, WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/01/8921763/sars-type-economic-effects-during-infectious-disease-outbreaks
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/6440
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!