Social contact patterns and implications for infectious disease transmission - a systematic review and meta-analysis of contact surveys.
Mousa A, Winskill P, Watson OJ, Ratmann O, Monod M, Ajelli M, Diallo A, Dodd PJ, Grijalva CG, Kiti MC, Krishnan A, Kumar R, Kumar S, Kwok KO, Lanata CF, de Waroux OLP, Leung K, Mahikul W, Melegaro A, Morrow CD, Mossong J, Neal EF, Nokes DJ, Pan-Ngum W, Potter GE, Russell FM, Saha S, Sugimoto JD, Wei WI, Wood RR, Wu J, Zhang J, Walker P, Whittaker C.
Mousa A, et al.
Elife. 2021 Nov 25;10:e70294. doi: 10.7554/eLife.70294.
Elife. 2021.
PMID: 34821551
Free PMC article.
A higher proportion of contacts were made at home in low-income settings, and work/school contacts were more frequent in high-income strata. ...These kinds of surveys help scientists to predict how infectious diseases might spread. But there is a problem: most of th …
A higher proportion of contacts were made at home in low-income settings, and work/school contacts were more frequent in high-income …