2023
DOI: 10.1111/poms.13709
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Collaboration–competition dilemma in flattening the COVID‐19 curve

Abstract: Testing for COVID‐19 is a key intervention that supports tracking and isolation to prevent further infections. However, diagnostic tests are a scarce and finite resource, so abundance in one country can quickly lead to shortages in others, creating a competitive landscape. Countries experience peaks in infections at different times, meaning that the need for diagnostic tests also peaks at different moments. This phase lag implies opportunities for a more collaborative approach, although countries might also wo… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Typically, research on migrant flows has relied upon mathematical models (Nagurney, 2021) or secondary data with fixed assumptions (Rahmati & Tularam, 2017), and evidencebased research based upon real data on horizontal cooperation is limited (Van Oorschot et al, 2023). However, "it is preferable to use real data" (Gupta et al, 2016(Gupta et al, , p 1630 to develop a theory.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Typically, research on migrant flows has relied upon mathematical models (Nagurney, 2021) or secondary data with fixed assumptions (Rahmati & Tularam, 2017), and evidencebased research based upon real data on horizontal cooperation is limited (Van Oorschot et al, 2023). However, "it is preferable to use real data" (Gupta et al, 2016(Gupta et al, , p 1630 to develop a theory.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Van Oorschot et al. (2023) examine the risks to countries that help others by reallocating their excess inventory of diagnostic tests. Tests are scarce and finite resources, so there can be abundance in one country while shortages exist in others, creating a competitive landscape.…”
Section: Public Policies/government Interventionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For operations, the natural research questions for government decision makers are (1) what policies/interventions the government (central/regional) should take and (2) the efficacy of alternative or implemented policies and interventions. The special issue contains four papers focusing on public policies and government interventions: "Pandemic lockdown, isolation, and exit policies based on machine learning predictions" (Evgeniou et al, 2023); "Model-informed health system reorganization during emergencies" (Goncalves et al, 2023); "Collaborationcompetition dilemma in flattening the COVID-19 curve" (Van Oorschot et al, 2023); and "Managing disease containment measures during a pandemic" (Shahmanzari et al, 2023). Evgeniou et al (2023) ask how well a rapidly evolving pandemic can be managed when leveraging machine learning approaches to inform medical procedures that otherwise lack essential data during rapidly evolving epidemics to inform medical procedures.…”
Section: Public Policies/government Interventionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, SEIR models have been developed to both illustrate the spread of COVID‐19 and account for more behavioral responses such as public self‐isolation measures when the death rate is high (Fiddaman, 2020; Rahmandad et al., 2020; Struben, 2020). Other studies have also included increased hospital capacity (Goncalves et al., 2021) and inventory trading between countries (Van Oorschot et al., 2023). However, few if any of these studies have linked the contagion model to the economic model to study linkages between the two.…”
Section: Literature Review and Open Questions By Clustermentioning
confidence: 99%