Publication related to RSI or an RSI staff member
Mitigating the externality of diseases of poverty through health aid.
Authors
- Jnawali, Kamal, Jnawali K, Department of Mathematics, State University of New York at Oswego, Oswego 13126-3599, NY, USA.
- Tyshenko, Michael G, Tyshenko MG, Risk Sciences International, Ottawa, Canada.
- Oraby, Tamer, Oraby T, School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences, University of Texas-Rio Grande Valley, Edinburg, TX, USA.
YEAR OF PUBLICATION: 2021
SOURCE: R Soc Open Sci. 2021 Oct 13;8(10):211450. doi: 10.1098/rsos.211450. eCollection 2021 Oct.
JOURNAL TITLE ABBREVIATION: R Soc Open Sci
JOURNAL TITLE: Royal Society open science
ISSN: 2054-5703 (Print) 2054-5703 (Electronic) 2054-5703 (Linking)
VOLUME: 8
ISSUE: 10
PAGES: 211450
PLACE OF PUBLICATION: England
ABSTRACT:
Externality exists in healthcare when an individual benefits from others being healthy as it reduces the probability of getting sick from illness. Healthy workers are considered to be the more productive labourers leading to a country's positive economic growth over time. Several research studies have modelled disease transmission and its economic impact on a single country in isolation. We developed a two-country disease-economy model that explores disease transmission and cross-border infection of disease for its impacts. The model includes aspects of a worsening and rapid transmission of disease juxtaposed by positive impacts to the economy from tourism. We found that high friction affects the gross domestic product (GDP) of the lower-income country more than the higher-income country. Health aid from one country to another can substantially help grow the GDP of both countries due to the positive externality of disease reduction. Disease has less impact to both economies if the relative cost of treatment over an alternative (e.g. vaccination) is lower than the baseline value. Providing medical supplies to another country, adopting moderate friction between the countries, and finding treatments with lower costs result in the best scenario to preserve the GDP of both countries.
Externality exists in healthcare when an individual benefits from others being healthy as it reduces the probability of getting sick from illness. Healthy workers are considered to be the more productive labourers leading to a country's positive economic growth over time. Several research studies have modelled disease transmission and its economic impact on a single country in isolation. We developed a two-country disease-economy model that explores disease transmission and cross-border infection of disease for its impacts. The model includes aspects of a worsening and rapid transmission of disease juxtaposed by positive impacts to the economy from tourism. We found that high friction affects the gross domestic product (GDP) of the lower-income country more than the higher-income country. Health aid from one country to another can substantially help grow the GDP of both countries due to the positive externality of disease reduction. Disease has less impact to both economies if the relative cost of treatment over an alternative (e.g. vaccination) is lower than the baseline value. Providing medical supplies to another country, adopting moderate friction between the countries, and finding treatments with lower costs result in the best scenario to preserve the GDP of both countries.
COPYRIGHT INFORMATION: (c) 2021 The Authors.
LANGUAGE: eng
DATE OF PUBLICATION: 2021 Oct
DATE OF ELECTRONIC PUBLICATION: 20211013
DATE REVISED: 20240817
MESH DATE: 2021/10/19 06:01
EDAT: 2021/10/19 06:00
STATUS: PubMed-not-MEDLINE
PUBLICATION STATUS: epublish
LOCATION IDENTIFIER: 10.1098/rsos.211450 [doi] 211450
OWNER: NLM
Related RSI Experts
Senior Health Risk Analyst
Dr. Michael G. Tyshenko is a Senior Health Risk Analyst at Risk Sciences International (RSI), where he has contributed since 2018 to the organization’s most complex and cross-cutting public health risk issues. As RSI’s lead on chemical peer reviews, he...