Social Context and the Spread of HIV: An Evolutionary Game-Theoretic Investigation on the Impacts of Social Stigma on Epidemic Outcomes

We provide a theoretical foundation for analyzing how social stigma and adopted behavioral traits affect the transmission of HIV across a population. We combine an evolutionary game-theoretic model—based on a relationship signaling stage game—with the SIR (susceptible-infected-recovered) model of di...

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Main Authors: William D. Ferguson, Trang Kieu Nguyen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2014-08-01
Series:Economies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2227-7099/2/3/171
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spelling doaj-b2fec4a2659e4c47a9d95ec08c77210f2020-11-24T23:51:15ZengMDPI AGEconomies2227-70992014-08-012317119210.3390/economies2030171economies2030171Social Context and the Spread of HIV: An Evolutionary Game-Theoretic Investigation on the Impacts of Social Stigma on Epidemic OutcomesWilliam D. Ferguson0Trang Kieu Nguyen1Department of Economics, Grinnell College, 1210 Park Street, Grinnell, IA 50112, USALondon School of Economics and Political Science, Houghton Street, London WC2A 2AE, UKWe provide a theoretical foundation for analyzing how social stigma and adopted behavioral traits affect the transmission of HIV across a population. We combine an evolutionary game-theoretic model—based on a relationship signaling stage game—with the SIR (susceptible-infected-recovered) model of disease transmission. Our evolutionary model specifies how two types of social stigma—that which accompanies an HIV+ condition and that which follows associating with an HIV+ partner—influence behavioral propensities to honestly report one’s condition (or not) and to unconditionally accept relationships (or not). With respect to reporting an HIV+ condition, we find that condition stigma impedes the fitness of honest reporting, whereas association stigma impedes the relative fitness of concealing an HIV+ condition; and both propensities can coexist in a polymorphic equilibrium. By linking our model to the SIR model, we find that condition stigma unambiguously enhances disease transmission by discouraging both honest reporting and a society’s acceptance of AIDS education, whereas association stigma has an ambiguous impact: on one hand it can impede HIV transmission by discouraging concealing behavior and unconditional relationship acceptance, but it also compromises a society’s acceptance of AIDS education. Our relatively simple evolutionary/SIR model offers a foundation for numerous theoretical extensions—such as applications to social network theory—as well as foundation for many testable empirical hypotheses.http://www.mdpi.com/2227-7099/2/3/171evolutionary game theoryHIV transmissionpolymorphic equilibriumSIR model of disease transmissionsocial stigma
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author William D. Ferguson
Trang Kieu Nguyen
spellingShingle William D. Ferguson
Trang Kieu Nguyen
Social Context and the Spread of HIV: An Evolutionary Game-Theoretic Investigation on the Impacts of Social Stigma on Epidemic Outcomes
Economies
evolutionary game theory
HIV transmission
polymorphic equilibrium
SIR model of disease transmission
social stigma
author_facet William D. Ferguson
Trang Kieu Nguyen
author_sort William D. Ferguson
title Social Context and the Spread of HIV: An Evolutionary Game-Theoretic Investigation on the Impacts of Social Stigma on Epidemic Outcomes
title_short Social Context and the Spread of HIV: An Evolutionary Game-Theoretic Investigation on the Impacts of Social Stigma on Epidemic Outcomes
title_full Social Context and the Spread of HIV: An Evolutionary Game-Theoretic Investigation on the Impacts of Social Stigma on Epidemic Outcomes
title_fullStr Social Context and the Spread of HIV: An Evolutionary Game-Theoretic Investigation on the Impacts of Social Stigma on Epidemic Outcomes
title_full_unstemmed Social Context and the Spread of HIV: An Evolutionary Game-Theoretic Investigation on the Impacts of Social Stigma on Epidemic Outcomes
title_sort social context and the spread of hiv: an evolutionary game-theoretic investigation on the impacts of social stigma on epidemic outcomes
publisher MDPI AG
series Economies
issn 2227-7099
publishDate 2014-08-01
description We provide a theoretical foundation for analyzing how social stigma and adopted behavioral traits affect the transmission of HIV across a population. We combine an evolutionary game-theoretic model—based on a relationship signaling stage game—with the SIR (susceptible-infected-recovered) model of disease transmission. Our evolutionary model specifies how two types of social stigma—that which accompanies an HIV+ condition and that which follows associating with an HIV+ partner—influence behavioral propensities to honestly report one’s condition (or not) and to unconditionally accept relationships (or not). With respect to reporting an HIV+ condition, we find that condition stigma impedes the fitness of honest reporting, whereas association stigma impedes the relative fitness of concealing an HIV+ condition; and both propensities can coexist in a polymorphic equilibrium. By linking our model to the SIR model, we find that condition stigma unambiguously enhances disease transmission by discouraging both honest reporting and a society’s acceptance of AIDS education, whereas association stigma has an ambiguous impact: on one hand it can impede HIV transmission by discouraging concealing behavior and unconditional relationship acceptance, but it also compromises a society’s acceptance of AIDS education. Our relatively simple evolutionary/SIR model offers a foundation for numerous theoretical extensions—such as applications to social network theory—as well as foundation for many testable empirical hypotheses.
topic evolutionary game theory
HIV transmission
polymorphic equilibrium
SIR model of disease transmission
social stigma
url http://www.mdpi.com/2227-7099/2/3/171
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