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Best and worst policy control in low-prevalence SEIR

We consider the low-prevalence linearized SEIR epidemic model for a society that has resolved to keep future infections low in anticipation of a vaccine. The society can vary its amount of potentially-infection-spreading activity over time, within a certain feasible range. Because the activity has social or economic value, the society aims to maximize activity overall subject to infection rate constraints. We find that consistent policies are the worst possible in terms of activity, while the best policies alternate between high and low activity. In a variant involving multiple subpopulations, we find that the best policies are maximally coordinated (maintaining similar prevalence among subpopulations) but oscillatory (having growth rates that vary in time). It turns out that linearized SEIR is mathematically equivalent to an idealized racecar model (with different subpopulations corresponding to different cars) and the amount of fuel used corresponds to the amount of activity. Using this analogy, steady V-shaped formations (in which one subpopulation "leads the way" with consistently higher prevalence and activity, while others follow behind with lower prevalence and activity) are especially problematic. These formations are very effective at minimizing fuel use, hence very ineffective at boosting activity. In an appendix, we obtain analogous results for alternative notions of activity, which incorporate crowding effects.

preprint2020arXivOpen access
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