Campbell Patricia Therese, McVernon Jodie, Shrestha Niraj, Nathan Paula M, Geard Nicholas
Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity, University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC, Australia.
Infection and Immunity, Murdoch Childrens Research Institute, Royal Children's Hospital, Parkville, VIC, Australia.
BMC Infect Dis. 2017 Sep 20;17(1):634. doi: 10.1186/s12879-017-2735-8.
Models of infectious disease are increasingly utilising empirical contact data to quantify the number of potentially infectious contacts between age groups. While a growing body of data is being collected on contact patterns across many populations, less attention has been paid to the social contacts of young infants. We collected information on the social contacts of primary carers of young infants and investigated their potential for use as a proxy for contacts made by their infant.
We recruited primary carers of infants under one year of age residing in two geographically, demographically and socioeconomically distinct local government areas of Melbourne, Australia - Boroondara and Hume - including a sub-group of Turkish-speaking participants. Participants recorded their own contacts in a paper diary and noted whether their infant was present or absent. Information collected included times at an address; description of location; and details on people contacted at the location. Descriptive summary measures and distributions of contacts by location type, intensity, day of contact and by age are reported.
Of the 226 participants recruited, 220 completed diaries were returned. Participant contact patterns were similar across all groups, with respect to the types of locations, intensity and day of contact, with some variation in the number of unique daily contacts. The infant was present at around 85% of locations at which the primary carer contacted other individuals. The majority of contacts occurring when the infant was present were in Own Home (32%), Retail and Hospitality (18%) and Transport (18%) settings. The mean daily number of unique contacts by infants was estimated as 9.1, 8.7 and 6.5 in Boroondara, Hume (English) and Hume (Turkish), respectively, with a similar age distribution across each of our surveyed groups.
Our demonstration that contact patterns of mothers with infants are reasonably robust to socioeconomic and cultural differences is a step forward in modelling infectious disease transmission. With infants spending most of their time in the company of their mother, contact patterns of mothers are a useful proxy measure of infant contact patterns. The age distribution of contacts made by infants estimated in this study may be used to supplement population-wide contact information commonly used in infectious disease transmission models.
传染病模型越来越多地利用实证接触数据来量化不同年龄组之间潜在的感染性接触数量。虽然针对许多人群的接触模式收集的数据越来越多,但对幼儿社会接触的关注较少。我们收集了幼儿主要照料者的社会接触信息,并调查了其作为幼儿接触情况替代指标的潜力。
我们招募了居住在澳大利亚墨尔本两个在地理、人口和社会经济方面具有明显差异的地方政府辖区——博伦达拉和休姆——的一岁以下婴儿的主要照料者,其中包括一个说土耳其语的参与者亚组。参与者在纸质日记中记录自己的接触情况,并注明其婴儿是否在场。收集的信息包括在某个地址的时间、地点描述以及在该地点接触的人的详细信息。报告了按地点类型、接触强度、接触日和年龄划分的接触情况的描述性汇总指标和分布情况。
在招募的226名参与者中,共收回220份完成的日记。所有组的参与者接触模式在地点类型、接触强度和接触日方面相似,唯一的每日接触数量存在一些差异。在主要照料者与其他人接触的约85%的地点,婴儿在场。婴儿在场时发生的大多数接触发生在自己家中(32%)、零售和餐饮场所(18%)以及交通场所(18%)。在博伦达拉、休姆(英语)和休姆(土耳其语),婴儿的平均每日唯一接触数量分别估计为9.1、8.7和6.5,我们调查的每个组的年龄分布相似。
我们证明母亲与婴儿的接触模式对社会经济和文化差异具有相当的稳健性,这是传染病传播建模的一个进步。由于婴儿大部分时间都在母亲身边,母亲的接触模式是婴儿接触模式的一个有用替代指标。本研究中估计的婴儿接触的年龄分布可用于补充传染病传播模型中常用的全人群接触信息。