Uptake of Diagnostic Tests by Livestock Farmers: A Stochastic Game Theory Approach

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Standard

Uptake of Diagnostic Tests by Livestock Farmers : A Stochastic Game Theory Approach. / Mohr, Sibylle; Beard, Rodney; Nisbet, Alasdair J.; Burgess, Stewart T.G.; Reeve, Richard; Denwood, Matthew; Porphyre, Thibaud; Zadoks, Ruth N.; Matthews, Louise.

I: Frontiers in Veterinary Science, Bind 7, 36, 2020.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Mohr, S, Beard, R, Nisbet, AJ, Burgess, STG, Reeve, R, Denwood, M, Porphyre, T, Zadoks, RN & Matthews, L 2020, 'Uptake of Diagnostic Tests by Livestock Farmers: A Stochastic Game Theory Approach', Frontiers in Veterinary Science, bind 7, 36. https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2020.00036

APA

Mohr, S., Beard, R., Nisbet, A. J., Burgess, S. T. G., Reeve, R., Denwood, M., Porphyre, T., Zadoks, R. N., & Matthews, L. (2020). Uptake of Diagnostic Tests by Livestock Farmers: A Stochastic Game Theory Approach. Frontiers in Veterinary Science, 7, [36]. https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2020.00036

Vancouver

Mohr S, Beard R, Nisbet AJ, Burgess STG, Reeve R, Denwood M o.a. Uptake of Diagnostic Tests by Livestock Farmers: A Stochastic Game Theory Approach. Frontiers in Veterinary Science. 2020;7. 36. https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2020.00036

Author

Mohr, Sibylle ; Beard, Rodney ; Nisbet, Alasdair J. ; Burgess, Stewart T.G. ; Reeve, Richard ; Denwood, Matthew ; Porphyre, Thibaud ; Zadoks, Ruth N. ; Matthews, Louise. / Uptake of Diagnostic Tests by Livestock Farmers : A Stochastic Game Theory Approach. I: Frontiers in Veterinary Science. 2020 ; Bind 7.

Bibtex

@article{9187e8921f414ae2a20e32e12ff9d557,
title = "Uptake of Diagnostic Tests by Livestock Farmers: A Stochastic Game Theory Approach",
abstract = "Game theory examines strategic decision-making in situations of conflict, cooperation, and coordination. It has become an established tool in economics, psychology and political science, and more recently has been applied to disease control. Used to examine vaccination uptake in human medicine, game theory shows that when vaccination is voluntary some individuals will choose to “free-ride” on the protection provided by others, resulting in insufficient coverage for control of a vaccine-preventable disease. Here, we use game theory to examine farmer uptake of a new diagnostic ELISA test for sheep scab—a highly infectious disease with an estimated cost exceeding £8M per year to the UK industry. The stochastic game models decisions made by neighboring farmers when deciding whether to adopt the newly available test, which can detect subclinical infestation. A key element of the stochastic game framework is that it allows multiple states. Depending on infestation status and test adoption decisions in the previous year, a farm may be at high, medium or low risk of infestation this year—a status which influences the decision the farmer makes and the farmer payoffs. Ultimately, each farmer's decision depends on the costs of using the diagnostic test vs. the benefits of enhanced disease control, which may only accrue in the longer term. The extent to which a farmer values short-term over long-term benefits reflects external factors such as inflation or individual characteristics such as patience. Our results show that when using realistic parameters and with a test cost around 50% more than the current clinical diagnosis, the test will be adopted in the high-risk state, but not in the low-risk state. For the medium risk state, test adoption will depend on whether the farmer takes a long-term or short-term view. We show that these outcomes are relatively robust to change in test costs and, moreover, that whilst the farmers adopting the test would not expect to see large gains in profitability, substantial reduction in sheep scab (and associated welfare implications) could be achieved in a cost-neutral way to the industry.",
keywords = "disease control, game theory, Nash equilibrium, sheep scab, social optimum, stochastic game",
author = "Sibylle Mohr and Rodney Beard and Nisbet, {Alasdair J.} and Burgess, {Stewart T.G.} and Richard Reeve and Matthew Denwood and Thibaud Porphyre and Zadoks, {Ruth N.} and Louise Matthews",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.3389/fvets.2020.00036",
language = "English",
volume = "7",
journal = "Frontiers in Veterinary Science",
issn = "2297-1769",
publisher = "Frontiers Media",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Uptake of Diagnostic Tests by Livestock Farmers

T2 - A Stochastic Game Theory Approach

AU - Mohr, Sibylle

AU - Beard, Rodney

AU - Nisbet, Alasdair J.

AU - Burgess, Stewart T.G.

AU - Reeve, Richard

AU - Denwood, Matthew

AU - Porphyre, Thibaud

AU - Zadoks, Ruth N.

AU - Matthews, Louise

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Game theory examines strategic decision-making in situations of conflict, cooperation, and coordination. It has become an established tool in economics, psychology and political science, and more recently has been applied to disease control. Used to examine vaccination uptake in human medicine, game theory shows that when vaccination is voluntary some individuals will choose to “free-ride” on the protection provided by others, resulting in insufficient coverage for control of a vaccine-preventable disease. Here, we use game theory to examine farmer uptake of a new diagnostic ELISA test for sheep scab—a highly infectious disease with an estimated cost exceeding £8M per year to the UK industry. The stochastic game models decisions made by neighboring farmers when deciding whether to adopt the newly available test, which can detect subclinical infestation. A key element of the stochastic game framework is that it allows multiple states. Depending on infestation status and test adoption decisions in the previous year, a farm may be at high, medium or low risk of infestation this year—a status which influences the decision the farmer makes and the farmer payoffs. Ultimately, each farmer's decision depends on the costs of using the diagnostic test vs. the benefits of enhanced disease control, which may only accrue in the longer term. The extent to which a farmer values short-term over long-term benefits reflects external factors such as inflation or individual characteristics such as patience. Our results show that when using realistic parameters and with a test cost around 50% more than the current clinical diagnosis, the test will be adopted in the high-risk state, but not in the low-risk state. For the medium risk state, test adoption will depend on whether the farmer takes a long-term or short-term view. We show that these outcomes are relatively robust to change in test costs and, moreover, that whilst the farmers adopting the test would not expect to see large gains in profitability, substantial reduction in sheep scab (and associated welfare implications) could be achieved in a cost-neutral way to the industry.

AB - Game theory examines strategic decision-making in situations of conflict, cooperation, and coordination. It has become an established tool in economics, psychology and political science, and more recently has been applied to disease control. Used to examine vaccination uptake in human medicine, game theory shows that when vaccination is voluntary some individuals will choose to “free-ride” on the protection provided by others, resulting in insufficient coverage for control of a vaccine-preventable disease. Here, we use game theory to examine farmer uptake of a new diagnostic ELISA test for sheep scab—a highly infectious disease with an estimated cost exceeding £8M per year to the UK industry. The stochastic game models decisions made by neighboring farmers when deciding whether to adopt the newly available test, which can detect subclinical infestation. A key element of the stochastic game framework is that it allows multiple states. Depending on infestation status and test adoption decisions in the previous year, a farm may be at high, medium or low risk of infestation this year—a status which influences the decision the farmer makes and the farmer payoffs. Ultimately, each farmer's decision depends on the costs of using the diagnostic test vs. the benefits of enhanced disease control, which may only accrue in the longer term. The extent to which a farmer values short-term over long-term benefits reflects external factors such as inflation or individual characteristics such as patience. Our results show that when using realistic parameters and with a test cost around 50% more than the current clinical diagnosis, the test will be adopted in the high-risk state, but not in the low-risk state. For the medium risk state, test adoption will depend on whether the farmer takes a long-term or short-term view. We show that these outcomes are relatively robust to change in test costs and, moreover, that whilst the farmers adopting the test would not expect to see large gains in profitability, substantial reduction in sheep scab (and associated welfare implications) could be achieved in a cost-neutral way to the industry.

KW - disease control

KW - game theory

KW - Nash equilibrium

KW - sheep scab

KW - social optimum

KW - stochastic game

U2 - 10.3389/fvets.2020.00036

DO - 10.3389/fvets.2020.00036

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 32118060

AN - SCOPUS:85079613639

VL - 7

JO - Frontiers in Veterinary Science

JF - Frontiers in Veterinary Science

SN - 2297-1769

M1 - 36

ER -

ID: 237099944