posted on 2002-01-01, 00:00authored byDoris Winkler, Jonathan Caulkins, Doris A. Behrens, Gernot Tragler
Drug use and problems change dramatically over time in ways that are often described
as reflecting an “epidemic cycle”. We use simulation of a model of drug epidemics to
investigate how the relative effectiveness of different types of prevention varies over the course
of such an epidemic. Specifically we use the so-called LHY model (see Behrens et al., 2000b)
which includes both “contagious” spread of initiation (a positive feedback) and memory of past
use (a negative feedback), which dampens initiation and, hence, future use. The analysis confirms
the common sense intuition that prevention is more highly leveraged early in an epidemic,
although the extent to which this is true in this model is striking, particularly for campaigns designed
to leverage awareness of the drug’s dangers. The findings also suggest that the design of
“secondary” prevention programs should change over the course of an epidemic.