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Mathematically modeling worried-well behavior during infectious disease outbreaks

Mathematically modeling worried-well behavior during infectious disease outbreaks
Mathematically modeling worried-well behavior during infectious disease outbreaks

Although curtailing pathogen spread is critical for mitigating the impact of novel infectious disease outbreaks, addressing the psychological and social responses of populations is also important. This is because uninfected individuals who display an excessive concern of the disease can significantly strain healthcare systems. In existing research, the transmission dynamics of such “worried-well” behavior is largely unexplored. We present a mathematical modeling framework to study such spread alongside the pathogen’s transmission. Our approach extends traditional compartmental models to specifically include the psychological transmission of worry, while acknowledging two extremes of this behavioral response: overly cautious and defiantly protesting. We provide guidance for policymakers, towards healthcare resource allocation and disease outbreak management, by deriving insights into the differential impacts of both these behaviors. Our findings suggest that different strategies are required to manage worried-well surges, depending on the dominant behavioral regime.

1932-6203
Singh, Bismark
9d3fc6cb-f55e-4562-9d5f-42f9a3ddd9a1
Gromov, Dmitry
8d88240f-2d4a-4b26-9849-da514e635de9
Singh, Bismark
9d3fc6cb-f55e-4562-9d5f-42f9a3ddd9a1
Gromov, Dmitry
8d88240f-2d4a-4b26-9849-da514e635de9

Singh, Bismark and Gromov, Dmitry (2025) Mathematically modeling worried-well behavior during infectious disease outbreaks. PLoS ONE, 20 (9), [e0319550]. (doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0319550).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Although curtailing pathogen spread is critical for mitigating the impact of novel infectious disease outbreaks, addressing the psychological and social responses of populations is also important. This is because uninfected individuals who display an excessive concern of the disease can significantly strain healthcare systems. In existing research, the transmission dynamics of such “worried-well” behavior is largely unexplored. We present a mathematical modeling framework to study such spread alongside the pathogen’s transmission. Our approach extends traditional compartmental models to specifically include the psychological transmission of worry, while acknowledging two extremes of this behavioral response: overly cautious and defiantly protesting. We provide guidance for policymakers, towards healthcare resource allocation and disease outbreak management, by deriving insights into the differential impacts of both these behaviors. Our findings suggest that different strategies are required to manage worried-well surges, depending on the dominant behavioral regime.

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journal.pone.0319550 - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 11 September 2025
Published date: 29 September 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 506533
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506533
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: 053f8621-48dc-4590-83ed-3323808a90a3
ORCID for Bismark Singh: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6943-657X

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 11 Nov 2025 17:36
Last modified: 12 Nov 2025 03:03

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Contributors

Author: Bismark Singh ORCID iD
Author: Dmitry Gromov

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