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Social contact patterns and implications for infectious disease transmission – a systematic review and meta-analysis of contact surveys

BACKGROUND: Transmission of respiratory pathogens such as SARS-CoV-2 depends on patterns of contact and mixing across populations. Understanding this is crucial to predict pathogen spread and the effectiveness of control efforts. Most analyses of contact patterns to date have focused on high-income...

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Autores principales: Mousa, Andria, Winskill, Peter, Watson, Oliver John, Ratmann, Oliver, Monod, Mélodie, Ajelli, Marco, Diallo, Aldiouma, Dodd, Peter J, Grijalva, Carlos G, Kiti, Moses Chapa, Krishnan, Anand, Kumar, Rakesh, Kumar, Supriya, Kwok, Kin O, Lanata, Claudio F, de Waroux, Olivier Le Polain, Leung, Kathy, Mahikul, Wiriya, Melegaro, Alessia, Morrow, Carl D, Mossong, Joël, Neal, Eleanor FG, Nokes, D James, Pan-ngum, Wirichada, Potter, Gail E, Russell, Fiona M, Saha, Siddhartha, Sugimoto, Jonathan D, Wei, Wan In, Wood, Robin R, Wu, Joseph, Zhang, Juanjuan, Walker, Patrick, Whittaker, Charles
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8765757/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34821551
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.70294
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author Mousa, Andria
Winskill, Peter
Watson, Oliver John
Ratmann, Oliver
Monod, Mélodie
Ajelli, Marco
Diallo, Aldiouma
Dodd, Peter J
Grijalva, Carlos G
Kiti, Moses Chapa
Krishnan, Anand
Kumar, Rakesh
Kumar, Supriya
Kwok, Kin O
Lanata, Claudio F
de Waroux, Olivier Le Polain
Leung, Kathy
Mahikul, Wiriya
Melegaro, Alessia
Morrow, Carl D
Mossong, Joël
Neal, Eleanor FG
Nokes, D James
Pan-ngum, Wirichada
Potter, Gail E
Russell, Fiona M
Saha, Siddhartha
Sugimoto, Jonathan D
Wei, Wan In
Wood, Robin R
Wu, Joseph
Zhang, Juanjuan
Walker, Patrick
Whittaker, Charles
author_facet Mousa, Andria
Winskill, Peter
Watson, Oliver John
Ratmann, Oliver
Monod, Mélodie
Ajelli, Marco
Diallo, Aldiouma
Dodd, Peter J
Grijalva, Carlos G
Kiti, Moses Chapa
Krishnan, Anand
Kumar, Rakesh
Kumar, Supriya
Kwok, Kin O
Lanata, Claudio F
de Waroux, Olivier Le Polain
Leung, Kathy
Mahikul, Wiriya
Melegaro, Alessia
Morrow, Carl D
Mossong, Joël
Neal, Eleanor FG
Nokes, D James
Pan-ngum, Wirichada
Potter, Gail E
Russell, Fiona M
Saha, Siddhartha
Sugimoto, Jonathan D
Wei, Wan In
Wood, Robin R
Wu, Joseph
Zhang, Juanjuan
Walker, Patrick
Whittaker, Charles
author_sort Mousa, Andria
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Transmission of respiratory pathogens such as SARS-CoV-2 depends on patterns of contact and mixing across populations. Understanding this is crucial to predict pathogen spread and the effectiveness of control efforts. Most analyses of contact patterns to date have focused on high-income settings. METHODS: Here, we conduct a systematic review and individual-participant meta-analysis of surveys carried out in low- and middle-income countries and compare patterns of contact in these settings to surveys previously carried out in high-income countries. Using individual-level data from 28,503 participants and 413,069 contacts across 27 surveys, we explored how contact characteristics (number, location, duration, and whether physical) vary across income settings. RESULTS: Contact rates declined with age in high- and upper-middle-income settings, but not in low-income settings, where adults aged 65+ made similar numbers of contacts as younger individuals and mixed with all age groups. Across all settings, increasing household size was a key determinant of contact frequency and characteristics, with low-income settings characterised by the largest, most intergenerational households. A higher proportion of contacts were made at home in low-income settings, and work/school contacts were more frequent in high-income strata. We also observed contrasting effects of gender across income strata on the frequency, duration, and type of contacts individuals made. CONCLUSIONS: These differences in contact patterns between settings have material consequences for both spread of respiratory pathogens and the effectiveness of different non-pharmaceutical interventions. FUNDING: This work is primarily being funded by joint Centre funding from the UK Medical Research Council and DFID (MR/R015600/1).
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spelling pubmed-87657572022-01-19 Social contact patterns and implications for infectious disease transmission – a systematic review and meta-analysis of contact surveys Mousa, Andria Winskill, Peter Watson, Oliver John Ratmann, Oliver Monod, Mélodie Ajelli, Marco Diallo, Aldiouma Dodd, Peter J Grijalva, Carlos G Kiti, Moses Chapa Krishnan, Anand Kumar, Rakesh Kumar, Supriya Kwok, Kin O Lanata, Claudio F de Waroux, Olivier Le Polain Leung, Kathy Mahikul, Wiriya Melegaro, Alessia Morrow, Carl D Mossong, Joël Neal, Eleanor FG Nokes, D James Pan-ngum, Wirichada Potter, Gail E Russell, Fiona M Saha, Siddhartha Sugimoto, Jonathan D Wei, Wan In Wood, Robin R Wu, Joseph Zhang, Juanjuan Walker, Patrick Whittaker, Charles eLife Epidemiology and Global Health BACKGROUND: Transmission of respiratory pathogens such as SARS-CoV-2 depends on patterns of contact and mixing across populations. Understanding this is crucial to predict pathogen spread and the effectiveness of control efforts. Most analyses of contact patterns to date have focused on high-income settings. METHODS: Here, we conduct a systematic review and individual-participant meta-analysis of surveys carried out in low- and middle-income countries and compare patterns of contact in these settings to surveys previously carried out in high-income countries. Using individual-level data from 28,503 participants and 413,069 contacts across 27 surveys, we explored how contact characteristics (number, location, duration, and whether physical) vary across income settings. RESULTS: Contact rates declined with age in high- and upper-middle-income settings, but not in low-income settings, where adults aged 65+ made similar numbers of contacts as younger individuals and mixed with all age groups. Across all settings, increasing household size was a key determinant of contact frequency and characteristics, with low-income settings characterised by the largest, most intergenerational households. A higher proportion of contacts were made at home in low-income settings, and work/school contacts were more frequent in high-income strata. We also observed contrasting effects of gender across income strata on the frequency, duration, and type of contacts individuals made. CONCLUSIONS: These differences in contact patterns between settings have material consequences for both spread of respiratory pathogens and the effectiveness of different non-pharmaceutical interventions. FUNDING: This work is primarily being funded by joint Centre funding from the UK Medical Research Council and DFID (MR/R015600/1). eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd 2021-11-25 /pmc/articles/PMC8765757/ /pubmed/34821551 http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.70294 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/This is an open-access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 public domain dedication (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) .
spellingShingle Epidemiology and Global Health
Mousa, Andria
Winskill, Peter
Watson, Oliver John
Ratmann, Oliver
Monod, Mélodie
Ajelli, Marco
Diallo, Aldiouma
Dodd, Peter J
Grijalva, Carlos G
Kiti, Moses Chapa
Krishnan, Anand
Kumar, Rakesh
Kumar, Supriya
Kwok, Kin O
Lanata, Claudio F
de Waroux, Olivier Le Polain
Leung, Kathy
Mahikul, Wiriya
Melegaro, Alessia
Morrow, Carl D
Mossong, Joël
Neal, Eleanor FG
Nokes, D James
Pan-ngum, Wirichada
Potter, Gail E
Russell, Fiona M
Saha, Siddhartha
Sugimoto, Jonathan D
Wei, Wan In
Wood, Robin R
Wu, Joseph
Zhang, Juanjuan
Walker, Patrick
Whittaker, Charles
Social contact patterns and implications for infectious disease transmission – a systematic review and meta-analysis of contact surveys
title Social contact patterns and implications for infectious disease transmission – a systematic review and meta-analysis of contact surveys
title_full Social contact patterns and implications for infectious disease transmission – a systematic review and meta-analysis of contact surveys
title_fullStr Social contact patterns and implications for infectious disease transmission – a systematic review and meta-analysis of contact surveys
title_full_unstemmed Social contact patterns and implications for infectious disease transmission – a systematic review and meta-analysis of contact surveys
title_short Social contact patterns and implications for infectious disease transmission – a systematic review and meta-analysis of contact surveys
title_sort social contact patterns and implications for infectious disease transmission – a systematic review and meta-analysis of contact surveys
topic Epidemiology and Global Health
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8765757/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34821551
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.70294
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