Comparison of contact patterns relevant for transmission of respiratory pathogens in Thailand and the Netherlands using respondent-driven sampling
Comparison of contact patterns relevant for transmission of respiratory pathogens in Thailand and the Netherlands using respondent-driven sampling
Understanding infection dynamics of respiratory diseases requires the identification and quantification of behavioural, social and environmental factors that permit the transmission of these infections between humans. Little empirical information is available about contact patterns within real-world social networks, let alone on differences in these contact networks between populations that differ considerably on a socio-cultural level. Here we compared contact network data that were collected in the Netherlands and Thailand using a similar online respondent-driven method. By asking participants to recruit contact persons we studied network links relevant for the transmission of respiratory infections. We studied correlations between recruiter and recruited contacts to investigate mixing patterns in the observed social network components. In both countries, mixing patterns were assortative by demographic variables and random by total numbers of contacts. However, in Thailand participants reported overall more contacts which resulted in higher effective contact rates. Our findings provide new insights on numbers of contacts and mixing patterns in two different populations. These data could be used to improve parameterisation of mathematical models used to design control strategies. Although the spread of infections through populations depends on more factors, found similarities suggest that spread may be similar in the Netherlands and Thailand.
1-21
Stein, Mart L.
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van Steenbergen, Jim E.
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Buskens, Vincent
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van der Heijden, Peter G.M.
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Chanyasanha, Charnchudhi
85ffe35a-cf88-448b-a195-7c81d2c1dd8f
Tipayamongkholgul, Mathuros
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Thorson, Anna E.
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Bengtsson, Linus
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Lu, Xin
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Kretzschmar, Mirjam E.E.
acee7a3c-75ce-43fc-b630-a7ad06121292
25 November 2014
Stein, Mart L.
6c39b550-56f1-4515-b85d-367d87ca31bb
van Steenbergen, Jim E.
99c4f75d-40c1-4aec-bc78-2e024e0369f2
Buskens, Vincent
45f4c94a-b1c3-4a9c-8c54-546d07d6666c
van der Heijden, Peter G.M.
85157917-3b33-4683-81be-713f987fd612
Chanyasanha, Charnchudhi
85ffe35a-cf88-448b-a195-7c81d2c1dd8f
Tipayamongkholgul, Mathuros
134f890a-0b68-4af1-91cd-4c6608cd3641
Thorson, Anna E.
ce1e1024-6169-473a-828b-6d38d9107b05
Bengtsson, Linus
f7585eb4-9e78-422d-8178-4310985aa24e
Lu, Xin
a681bac0-d6d1-4e8e-a642-4ce42ae2cc9d
Kretzschmar, Mirjam E.E.
acee7a3c-75ce-43fc-b630-a7ad06121292
Stein, Mart L., van Steenbergen, Jim E., Buskens, Vincent, van der Heijden, Peter G.M., Chanyasanha, Charnchudhi, Tipayamongkholgul, Mathuros, Thorson, Anna E., Bengtsson, Linus, Lu, Xin and Kretzschmar, Mirjam E.E.
(2014)
Comparison of contact patterns relevant for transmission of respiratory pathogens in Thailand and the Netherlands using respondent-driven sampling.
PLoS ONE, 9 (11), .
(doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0113711).
(PMID:25423343)
Abstract
Understanding infection dynamics of respiratory diseases requires the identification and quantification of behavioural, social and environmental factors that permit the transmission of these infections between humans. Little empirical information is available about contact patterns within real-world social networks, let alone on differences in these contact networks between populations that differ considerably on a socio-cultural level. Here we compared contact network data that were collected in the Netherlands and Thailand using a similar online respondent-driven method. By asking participants to recruit contact persons we studied network links relevant for the transmission of respiratory infections. We studied correlations between recruiter and recruited contacts to investigate mixing patterns in the observed social network components. In both countries, mixing patterns were assortative by demographic variables and random by total numbers of contacts. However, in Thailand participants reported overall more contacts which resulted in higher effective contact rates. Our findings provide new insights on numbers of contacts and mixing patterns in two different populations. These data could be used to improve parameterisation of mathematical models used to design control strategies. Although the spread of infections through populations depends on more factors, found similarities suggest that spread may be similar in the Netherlands and Thailand.
Other
F journal p one 0113711
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More information
Published date: 25 November 2014
Organisations:
Social Statistics & Demography
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 372176
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/372176
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: e849b7bf-156a-4a6d-8fff-2f62bb328b64
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Date deposited: 26 Nov 2014 16:51
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:46
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Contributors
Author:
Mart L. Stein
Author:
Jim E. van Steenbergen
Author:
Vincent Buskens
Author:
Charnchudhi Chanyasanha
Author:
Mathuros Tipayamongkholgul
Author:
Anna E. Thorson
Author:
Linus Bengtsson
Author:
Xin Lu
Author:
Mirjam E.E. Kretzschmar
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