Title of article :
A dynamic model of drug initiation: implications for treatment and drug control
Author/Authors :
Behrens، نويسنده , , Doris A. and Caulkins، نويسنده , , Jonathan P. and Tragler، نويسنده , , Gernot and Haunschmied، نويسنده , , Josef L. and Feichtinger، نويسنده , , Gustav، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Abstract :
We set up a time-continuous version of the first-order difference equation model of cocaine use introduced by Everingham and Rydell [S.S. Everingham, C.P. Rydell, Modeling the Demand for Cocaine, MR-332-ONDCP/A/DPRC, RAND, Santa Monica, CA, 1994] and extend it by making initiation an endogenous function of prevalence. This function reflects both the epidemic spread of drug use as users `infectʹ non-users and Mustoʹs [D.F. Musto, The American Disease: Origins of Narcotic Control, Oxford University, New York, 1987] hypothesis that drug epidemics die out when a new generation is deterred from initiating drug use by observing the ill effects manifest among heavy users. Analyzing the modelʹs dynamics suggests that drug prevention can temper drug prevalence and consumption, but that drug treatmentʹs effectiveness depends critically on the stage in the epidemic in which it is employed. Reducing the number of heavy users in the early stages of an epidemic can be counter-productive if it masks the risks of drug use and, thereby, removes a disincentive to initiation. This strong dependence of an interventionʹs effectiveness on the state of the dynamic system illustrates the pitfalls of applying a static control policy in a dynamic context.
Keywords :
Non-linear dynamic systems , Illicit drugs , Hopf bifurcation
Journal title :
Mathematical Biosciences
Journal title :
Mathematical Biosciences