Estimating contact patterns relevant to the spread of infectious diseases in Russia

被引:46
作者
Ajelli, Marco [1 ]
Litvinova, Maria [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Bruno Kessler Fdn, Via Sommar 18, I-38123 Trento, Italy
[2] Univ Trento, Sch Social Sci, Trento, Italy
[3] Tomsk Polytech Univ, Tomsk, Russia
关键词
Contact pattern; Human behavior; Airborne infectious diseases; Age; Mathematical modeling; PANDEMIC INFLUENZA; SOCIAL CONTACTS; MIXING PATTERNS; 6; CHALLENGES; TRANSMISSION;
D O I
10.1016/j.jtbi.2017.01.041
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Understanding human mixing patterns is the key to provide public health decision makers with model-based evaluation of strategies for the control of infectious diseases. Here we conducted a population-based survey in Tomsk, Russia, asking participants to record all their contacts in physical person during the day. We estimated 9.8 contacts per person per day on average, 15.2 when including additional estimated professional contacts. We found that contacts were highly assortative by age, especially for school-age individuals, and the number of contacts negatively correlated with the age of the participant. The network of contacts was quite clustered, with the majority of contacts (about 72%) occurring between family members, students of the same school/university, and work colleagues. School represents the location where the largest number of contacts was recorded students contacted about 7 individuals per day at school. Our modeling analysis based on the recorded contact patterns supports the importance of modeling age-mixing patterns we show that, in the case of an epidemic caused by a novel influenza virus, school-age individuals would be the most affected age group, followed by adults aged 35-44 years. In conclusion, this study reveals an age-mixing pattern in general agreement with that estimated for European countries, although with several quantitative differences. The observed differences can be attributable to sociodemographic and cultural differences between countries. The age- and setting-specific contact matrices provided in this study could be instrumental for the design of control measures for airborne infections, specifically targeted on the characteristics of the Russian population.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 7
页数:7
相关论文
共 33 条
[1]   The role of different social contexts in shaping influenza transmission during the 2009 pandemic [J].
Ajelli, Marco ;
Poletti, Piero ;
Melegaro, Alessia ;
Merler, Stefano .
SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2014, 4
[2]  
ANDERSON R M, 1991
[3]   Vaccination against pandemic influenza A/H1N1v in England: A real-time economic evaluation [J].
Baguelin, Marc ;
Van Hoek, Albert Jan ;
Jit, Mark ;
Flasche, Stefan ;
White, Peter J. ;
Edmunds, W. John .
VACCINE, 2010, 28 (12) :2370-2384
[4]   Estimates of the reproduction number for seasonal, pandemic, and zoonotic influenza: a systematic review of the literature [J].
Biggerstaff, Matthew ;
Cauchemez, Simon ;
Reed, Carrie ;
Gambhir, Manoj ;
Finelli, Lyn .
BMC INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2014, 14
[5]   Dynamics of Person-to-Person Interactions from Distributed RFID Sensor Networks [J].
Cattuto, Ciro ;
Van den Broeck, Wouter ;
Barrat, Alain ;
Colizza, Vittoria ;
Pinton, Jean-Francois ;
Vespignani, Alessandro .
PLOS ONE, 2010, 5 (07)
[6]  
DIEKMANN O, 1990, J MATH BIOL, V28, P365
[7]   Six challenges in measuring contact networks for use in modelling [J].
Eames, K. ;
Bansal, S. ;
Frost, S. ;
Riley, S. .
EPIDEMICS, 2015, 10 :72-77
[8]   Who mixes with whom? A method to determine the contact patterns of adults that may lead to the spread of airborne infections [J].
Edmunds, WJ ;
OCallaghan, CJ ;
Nokes, DJ .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 1997, 264 (1384) :949-957
[9]   Modelling disease outbreaks in realistic urban social networks [J].
Eubank, S ;
Guclu, H ;
Kumar, VSA ;
Marathe, MV ;
Srinivasan, A ;
Toroczkai, Z ;
Wang, N .
NATURE, 2004, 429 (6988) :180-184
[10]   Sexual behaviour in Britain:: reported sexually transmitted infections and prevalent genital Chlamydia trachomatis infection [J].
Fenton, KA ;
Korovessis, C ;
Johnson, AM ;
McCadden, A ;
McManus, S ;
Wellings, K ;
Mercer, CH ;
Carder, C ;
Copas, AJ ;
Nanchahal, K ;
Macdowall, W ;
Ridgway, G ;
Field, J ;
Erens, B .
LANCET, 2001, 358 (9296) :1851-1854