• Medientyp: Bericht; E-Book; Sonstige Veröffentlichung
  • Titel: Beyond just ``flattening the curve'': Optimal control of epidemics with purely non-pharmaceutical interventions
  • Beteiligte: Kantner, Markus [VerfasserIn]; Koprucki, Thomas [VerfasserIn]
  • Erschienen: Berlin : Weierstraß-Institut für Angewandte Analysis und Stochastik, 2020
  • Ausgabe: published Version
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.34657/8436; https://doi.org/10.20347/WIAS.PREPRINT.2748
  • ISSN: 2198-5855
  • Schlagwörter: optimal control ; dynamical systems ; Mathematical epidemiology ; COVID-19 ; effective reproduction number ; non-pharmaceutical interventions ; SARS-CoV2
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  • Beschreibung: When effective medical treatment and vaccination are not available, non-pharmaceutical interventions such as social distancing, home quarantine and far-reaching shutdown of public life are the only available strategies to prevent the spread of epidemics. Based on an extended SEIR (susceptible-exposed-infectious-recovered) model and continuous-time optimal control theory, we compute the optimal non-pharmaceutical intervention strategy for the case that a vaccine is never found and complete containment (eradication of the epidemic) is impossible. In this case, the optimal control must meet competing requirements: First, the minimization of disease-related deaths, and, second, the establishment of a sufficient degree of natural immunity at the end of the measures, in order to exclude a second wave. Moreover, the socio-economic costs of the intervention shall be kept at a minimum. The numerically computed optimal control strategy is a single-intervention scenario that goes beyond heuristically motivated interventions and simple "flattening of the curve". Careful analysis of the computed control strategy reveals, however, that the obtained solution is in fact a tightrope walk close to the stability boundary of the system, where socio-economic costs and the risk of a new outbreak must be constantly balanced against one another. The model system is calibrated to reproduce the initial exponential growth phase of the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany.
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