Osei Isaac, Mendy Emmanuel, van Zandvoort Kevin, Jobe Olimatou, Sarwar Golam, Wutor Baleng Mahama, Flasche Stefan, Mohammed Nuredin I, Bruce Jane, Greenwood Brian, Mackenzie Grant A
Medical Research Council Unit The Gambia at London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, the Gambia; Department of Disease Control, Faculty of Infectious and Tropical Diseases, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
Medical Research Council Unit The Gambia at London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, the Gambia.
Epidemics. 2024 Dec;49:100790. doi: 10.1016/j.epidem.2024.100790. Epub 2024 Sep 11.
School-aged children play a major role in the transmission of many respiratory pathogens due to high rate of close contacts in schools. The validity and accuracy of proxy-reported contact data may be limited, particularly for children when attending school. We observed social contacts within schools and assessed the accuracy of proxy-reported versus observed physical contact data among students in rural Gambia.
We enrolled school children who had also been recruited to a survey of Streptococcus pneumoniae carriage and social contacts. We visited participants at school and observed their contact patterns within and outside the classroom for two hours. We recorded the contact type, gender and approximate age of the contactee, and class size. We calculated age-stratified contact matrices to determine in-school contact patterns. We compared proxy-reported estimated physical contacts for the subset of participants (18 %) randomised to be observed on the same day for which the parent or caregiver reported the school contacts.
We recorded 3822 contacts for 219 participants from 114 schools. The median number of contacts was 15 (IQR: 11-20). Contact patterns were strongly age-assortative, and mainly involved physical touch (67.5 %). Those aged 5-9 years had the highest mean number of contacts [19.0 (95 %CI: 16.7-21.3)] while the ≥ 15-year age group had fewer contacts [12.8 (95 %CI: 10.9-14.7)]. Forty (18 %) participants had their school-observed contact data collected on the same day as their caregiver reported their estimated physical contacts at school; only 22.5 % had agreement within ±2 contacts between the observed and reported contacts. Fifty-eight percent of proxy-reported contacts were under-estimates.
Social contact rates observed among pupils at schools in rural Gambia were high, strongly age-assortative, and physical. Reporting of school contacts by proxies may underestimate the effect of school-age children in modelling studies of transmission of infections. New approaches are needed to quantify contacts within schools.
由于学校内密切接触率较高,学龄儿童在多种呼吸道病原体的传播中起主要作用。代理报告的接触数据的有效性和准确性可能有限,尤其是对于上学的儿童。我们观察了学校内的社交接触情况,并评估了冈比亚农村地区学生中代理报告的与观察到的身体接触数据的准确性。
我们招募了参加肺炎链球菌携带和社交接触调查的学童。我们到学校拜访参与者,并观察他们在教室内外两小时的接触模式。我们记录了接触类型、被接触者的性别和大致年龄以及班级规模。我们计算了按年龄分层的接触矩阵,以确定校内接触模式。我们比较了随机抽取的当天进行观察的参与者子集(18%)的代理报告的估计身体接触情况,这些参与者的家长或照顾者报告了他们在学校的接触情况。
我们记录了来自114所学校的219名参与者的3822次接触。接触次数的中位数为15次(四分位距:11 - 20次)。接触模式具有很强的年龄相关性,主要涉及身体接触(67.5%)。5 - 9岁的儿童平均接触次数最多[19.0(95%置信区间:16.7 - 21.3)],而≥15岁年龄组的接触次数较少[12.8(95%置信区间:10.9 - 14.7)]。40名(18%)参与者在其照顾者报告其在学校的估计身体接触情况的同一天收集了学校观察到的接触数据;在观察到的和报告的接触次数之间,只有22.5%的情况在±2次接触范围内一致。代理报告的接触中有58%被低估。
在冈比亚农村地区学校的学生中观察到的社交接触率很高,具有很强的年龄相关性且为身体接触。代理报告学校接触情况可能会低估学龄儿童在感染传播模型研究中的影响。需要新的方法来量化学校内的接触情况。