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Auteurs principaux: Dan, Shozen, Tegegne, Joshua, Chen, Yu, Ling, Zhi, Jaeger, Veronika K., Karch, André, Mishra, Swapnil, Ratmann, Oliver
Format: Preprint
Publié: 2024
Sujets:
Accès en ligne:https://arxiv.org/abs/2411.03774
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author Dan, Shozen
Tegegne, Joshua
Chen, Yu
Ling, Zhi
Jaeger, Veronika K.
Karch, André
Mishra, Swapnil
Ratmann, Oliver
author_facet Dan, Shozen
Tegegne, Joshua
Chen, Yu
Ling, Zhi
Jaeger, Veronika K.
Karch, André
Mishra, Swapnil
Ratmann, Oliver
contents Social contact surveys are an important tool to assess infection risks within populations, and the effect of non-pharmaceutical interventions on social behaviour during disease outbreaks, epidemics, and pandemics. Numerous longitudinal social contact surveys were conducted during the COVID-19 era, however data analysis is plagued by reporting fatigue, a phenomenon whereby the average number of social contacts reported declines with the number of repeat participations and as participants' engagement decreases over time. Using data from the German COVIMOD Study between April 2020 to December 2021, we demonstrate that reporting fatigue varied considerably by sociodemographic factors and was consistently strongest among parents reporting children contacts (parental proxy reporting), students, middle-aged individuals, those in full-time employment and those self-employed. We find further that, when using data from first-time participants as gold standard, statistical models incorporating a simple logistic function to control for reporting fatigue were associated with substantially improved estimation accuracy relative to models with no reporting fatigue adjustments, and that no cap on the number of repeat participations was required. These results indicate that existing longitudinal contact survey data can be meaningfully interpreted under an easy-to-implement statistical approach adressing reporting fatigue confounding, and that longitudinal designs including repeat participants are a viable option for future social contact survey designs.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2411_03774
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Towards pandemic preparedness: ability to estimate high-resolution social contact patterns from longitudinal surveys
Dan, Shozen
Tegegne, Joshua
Chen, Yu
Ling, Zhi
Jaeger, Veronika K.
Karch, André
Mishra, Swapnil
Ratmann, Oliver
Applications
Social contact surveys are an important tool to assess infection risks within populations, and the effect of non-pharmaceutical interventions on social behaviour during disease outbreaks, epidemics, and pandemics. Numerous longitudinal social contact surveys were conducted during the COVID-19 era, however data analysis is plagued by reporting fatigue, a phenomenon whereby the average number of social contacts reported declines with the number of repeat participations and as participants' engagement decreases over time. Using data from the German COVIMOD Study between April 2020 to December 2021, we demonstrate that reporting fatigue varied considerably by sociodemographic factors and was consistently strongest among parents reporting children contacts (parental proxy reporting), students, middle-aged individuals, those in full-time employment and those self-employed. We find further that, when using data from first-time participants as gold standard, statistical models incorporating a simple logistic function to control for reporting fatigue were associated with substantially improved estimation accuracy relative to models with no reporting fatigue adjustments, and that no cap on the number of repeat participations was required. These results indicate that existing longitudinal contact survey data can be meaningfully interpreted under an easy-to-implement statistical approach adressing reporting fatigue confounding, and that longitudinal designs including repeat participants are a viable option for future social contact survey designs.
title Towards pandemic preparedness: ability to estimate high-resolution social contact patterns from longitudinal surveys
topic Applications
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2411.03774