Publication | Open Access
Herd immunity and a vaccination game: An experimental study
49
Citations
28
References
2020
Year
VaccinationPublic PolicyInfectious Disease ModellingPreventive MedicineMedicineGame TheoryEpidemiological DynamicExperimental EconomicsBusinessVaccination ChoicesVaccine EfficacyPublic HealthVaccination GameAffected CommunitiesVaccine HesitancyMechanism DesignSocial DistancingCovid-19
Would the affected communities voluntarily obtain herd immunity if a cure for COVID-19 was available? This paper experimentally investigates people's vaccination choices in the context of a nonlinear public good game. A "vaccination game" is defined in which costly commitments (vaccination) are required of a fraction of the population to reach the critical level needed for herd immunity, without which defectors are punished by the natural contagion of epidemics. Our experimental implementation of a vaccination game in a controlled laboratory setting reveals that endogenous epidemic punishment is a credible threat, resulting in voluntary vaccination to obtain herd immunity, for which the orthodox principle of positive externalities fails to account. The concave nature of the infection probability plays a key role in facilitating the elimination of an epidemic.
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