Descripción del título

Increased HIV risk creates incentives for people with low sexual activity to reduce their activity, but may make high-activity people fatalistic, leading them to reduce their activity only slightly, or actually increase it. If high-activity people reduce their activity by a smaller proportion than low-activity people, the composition of the pool of available partners will worsen, creating positive feedbacks, and possibly multiple steady state levels of prevalence. The timing of public health efforts may affect long-run HIV prevalence
Monografía
monografia Rebiun36638715 https://catalogo.rebiun.org/rebiun/record/Rebiun36638715 m o d cr ||||||||||| 120107s1996 mau o 000 0 eng d 72460496 1027383298 1119429261 1243131437 UAO ocn756568805 DKDLA eng pn DKDLA OCLCQ COO OCLCQ OCLCO OCLCQ KIJ WYU YOU OCLCQ OCLCO OCLCQ NBERS OCLCO OCLCQ OCLCL OCLCQ I10 jelc O1 jelc "Integrating Behavioral Choice into Epidemiological Models of the AIDS Epidemic" Michael Kremer Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research 1996 Cambridge, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research 1 online resource 1 online resource Text txt rdacontent computer c rdamedia online resource cr rdacarrier NBER working paper series no. w5428 Increased HIV risk creates incentives for people with low sexual activity to reduce their activity, but may make high-activity people fatalistic, leading them to reduce their activity only slightly, or actually increase it. If high-activity people reduce their activity by a smaller proportion than low-activity people, the composition of the pool of available partners will worsen, creating positive feedbacks, and possibly multiple steady state levels of prevalence. The timing of public health efforts may affect long-run HIV prevalence General. Economic Development. Health General Kremer, Michael National Bureau of Economic Research Working paper series (National Bureau of Economic Research) no. w5428