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Improving Estimates of Social Contact Patterns for Airborne Transmission of Respiratory Pathogens

Authors :
Nicky McCreesh
Mbali Mohlamonyane
Anita Edwards
Stephen Olivier
Keabetswe Dikgale
Njabulo Dayi
Dickman Gareta
Robin Wood
Alison D. Grant
Richard G. White
Keren Middelkoop
Source :
Emerging Infectious Diseases, Vol 28, Iss 10, Pp 2016-2026 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2022.

Abstract

Data on social contact patterns are widely used to parameterize age-mixing matrices in mathematical models of infectious diseases. Most studies focus on close contacts only (i.e., persons spoken with face-to-face). This focus may be appropriate for studies of droplet and short-range aerosol transmission but neglects casual or shared air contacts, who may be at risk from airborne transmission. Using data from 2 provinces in South Africa, we estimated age mixing patterns relevant for droplet transmission, nonsaturating airborne transmission, and Mycobacterium tuberculosis transmission, an airborne infection where saturation of household contacts occurs. Estimated contact patterns by age did not vary greatly between the infection types, indicating that widespread use of close contact data may not be resulting in major inaccuracies. However, contact in persons >50 years of age was lower when we considered casual contacts, and therefore the contribution of older age groups to airborne transmission may be overestimated.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10806040 and 10806059
Volume :
28
Issue :
10
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Emerging Infectious Diseases
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.1021a1141554a9194ffc5015f23bbf9
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2810.212567