Mass testing and proactiveness affect epidemic spreading
Saptarshi Sinha, Deep Nath, and Soumen Roy

TL;DR
This study investigates how mass testing and proactive health measures influence the spread of diseases, especially asymptomatic ones, using simulations on different network structures to inform pandemic management strategies.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach modeling precautionary measures as strategies and examines their impact on epidemic dynamics considering asymptomatic infections.
Findings
Mass testing reduces the risk of pandemic outbreaks.
Network topology significantly affects disease spread outcomes.
Proactive individuals' initial fraction influences epidemic control.
Abstract
The detection and management of diseases become quite complicated when pathogens contain asymptomatic phenotypes amongst their ranks, as evident during the recent COVID-19 pandemic. Spreading of diseases has been studied extensively under the paradigm of Susceptible - Infected - Recovered - Deceased (SIRD) dynamics. Various game-theoretic approaches have also addressed disease spread, many of which consider S, I, R, and D as strategies rather than as states. Remarkably, most studies from the above approaches do not account for the distinction between the symptomatic or asymptomatic aspect of the disease. It is well-known that precautionary measures like washing hands, wearing masks and social distancing significantly mitigate the spread of many contagious diseases. Herein, we consider the adoption of such precautions as strategies and treat S, I, R, and D as states. We also attempt to…
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