Next flu pandemic could double past cost estimates
A pandemic influenza outbreak in the United States could have widespread economic costs nearly double the total amounts experts have previously calculated, depending on how the public, government, and businesses responded to an epidemic, according to policy and risk experts in a new study.
Policymakers’ and public health officials’ proper reactions could hold down the total costs to US GDP of an influenza outbreak. Otherwise, costs could be nearly double previous estimates ) Mariusz Szczygiel / 123rf)
Using an advanced methodology, also applicable to the Zika virus and other biothreats, to calculate the total cost of an influenza outbreak, the experts conclude that if the public used influenza vaccines during a pandemic outbreak the US GDP loss would be $34. 4 billion. It would be a lot higher, however, if the public didn’t use vaccines: $45.3 billion.
That’s a much larger price tag than other studies have found. But it’s not just the use or non-use of vaccines that drives costs.
Most economic studies of pandemic influenza focus on direct impacts such as vaccination, hospitalisation, injury, death, and business revenue or profit losses from reduced workforce. But those conventional direct and indirect economic impacts related to lost workdays: “Can be exacerbated greatly by various types of behavioural reactions and overreactions by the public, businesses and governments,” says Fynnwin Prager of California State University, Dominguez Hills.
Behavioural reactions include, for example, voluntary and mandatory avoidance of public places and interactions, such as sporting events, subway stations, quarantines, and travel bans, with significant economic ripple effects.
The new study by Professor Prager and colleagues Dan Wei and Adam Rose of University of Southern California – Total Economic Consequences of an Influenza Outbreak in the United States – was published in the online version of Risk Analysis, a publication of the Society for Risk Analysis. The study was conducted as part of an effort by the US Department of Homeland Security’s National Biosurveillance Integration Center (NBIC) to strengthen its decision-support capabilities. The study was funded by a contract with USC’s Center for Risk and Economic Analysis of Terrorism Events, a DHS Science and Technology Center of Excellence, with which all three authors are affiliated.
In their study, the authors estimate: “The relative prominence of the various economic consequence types,” as well as complicating factors, many of them not addressed in any prior study. These complicating factors include different types of avoidance behaviour, such as the already noted avoidance of public events and facilities. They also include what are called resilience actions, such as partnering with businesses to encourage individuals to return to work sooner and make up for lost work through flexible working hours to recapture lost production. These resilience actions can soften the overall impact of an influenza outbreak. The analysis: “Illustrates the importance of a more comprehensive framework for accurately measuring the macroeconomic impacts of biothreats,” say the authors.
The study analysed the economic impacts of a seasonal and a pandemic outbreak scenario. For both scenarios, vaccinations reduce the overall spread of the virus and, hence, are expected to reduce the magnitude of overall economic impacts. Results indicate that, in the absence of avoidance and resilience effects, the pandemic scenario could result in a US GDP loss of $25.4 billion, but vaccination could reduce the losses to $19.9 billion. But when avoidance and resilience are taken into account, a pandemic influenza outbreak could result in GDP losses of $45.3 billion without vaccination and $34.4 billion with vaccination.
The study results highlight a number of actionable items that government policymakers and public health officials can use to help reduce potential economic losses from the outbreaks. “Attempting to influence avoidance behaviour through public messaging and information campaigns, so-called ‘nudges,’ and other incentives may hold the potential for greatly reducing the economic costs of an influenza outbreak at a relatively low cost,” according to the authors.
Risk Analysis: An International Journal is published by the nonprofit Society for Risk Analysis (SRA), an interdisciplinary, scholarly, international society that provides an open forum for all who are interested in risk analysis, a critical function in complex modern societies. Risk analysis includes risk assessment, risk characterisation, risk communication, risk management, and risk policy affecting individuals, public- and private-sector organisations, and societies at a local, regional, national, or global level.