| Literature DB >> 27449511 |
Timo Smieszek1,2, Stefanie Castell3, Alain Barrat4,5, Ciro Cattuto5, Peter J White1,2, Gérard Krause6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Studies measuring contact networks have helped to improve our understanding of infectious disease transmission. However, several methodological issues are still unresolved, such as which method of contact measurement is the most valid. Further, complete network analysis requires data from most, ideally all, members of a network and, to achieve this, acceptance of the measurement method. We aimed at investigating measurement error by comparing two methods of contact measurement - paper diaries vs. wearable proximity sensors - that were applied concurrently to the same population, and we measured acceptability.Entities:
Keywords: Acceptability; Contact diary; Contact network; Infection transmission; Infectious disease; Measurement error; Network epidemiology; Network model; Proximity sensor; RFID
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27449511 PMCID: PMC4957345 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-016-1676-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Fig. 3Answer categories to items of acceptability questionnaire (missing values: first two questions: n = 15; questions 3, 4, 5, 8, 9, 11, 12: n = 16; questions 6, 7, 10: n = 17)
Number of contacts stratified by duration as reported in the diaries
| Reported duration: higher value | ||||||
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| Reported duration: lower value | <5 min | 5-15 min | 15-60 min | >60 min | Duration missing | Σ |
| No report |
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| Unknown ID |
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| <5 min |
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| 5-15 min |
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| 15-60 min |
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| >60 min |
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| Duration missing |
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For concordant reports that differ in duration, columns contain the higher, rows the lower duration report (i.e., there were 22 pairs of individuals such that one of the pair reported a contact of less than 5 min while the other one reported a contact of 5-15 min); discordant reports and unknown IDs are also shown in rows; bold numbers show data after matching (diary-optimized), numbers in parentheses show crude data; n.d. = not defined.
aThree contacts to a participant who did not return the diary are excluded from analysis.
Number of diary reports versus sensor recordings stratified by contact duration
| Sensor | |||||||
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| Diary | No detection | <5 min | 5-15 min | 15-60 min | >60 min | Unknown ID | Σ |
| No report |
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| <5 min |
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| 5-15 min |
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| 15-60 min |
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| >60 min |
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| Duration missing |
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Columns contain sensor measurements, rows diary reports; bold numbers show data after filtering (sensor data) and matching (sensor-optimized), numbers in parentheses show crude data; n.d. = not defined; a272 ≦1 min duration, b307 ≦1 min duration, both sensor-measured
Fig. 1Bland-Altman plots for degree measured by both methods: including a all contacts, b only contacts ≥5 minutes, c ≥15 minutes. SD: standard deviation, MoD: mean of degree difference
Fig. 2Sensor-based (abscissa) versus diary-based (ordinate) strength per participant. Diary-based strength is given as range, from the minimal plausible to the maximal plausible strength value that was consistent with the reported duration categories. Sensor-based strength values are point-estimates and jittered, where necessary. Dotted line indicates equal strength. Blue ranges include the corresponding sensor-based strength, red ranges exclude it
Diary- and sensor-based strength among the three groups that result from the diary-sensor-strength comparison
| Diary-based strength lower than the sensor measurement | Diary-based strength includes sensor measurement | Diary-based strength higher than the sensor measurement | |
|---|---|---|---|
| N (%) | 6 (8 %) | 26 (35 %) | 42 (57 %) |
| Diary-based strength (median) | 0 | 43 min | 171 min |
| Sensor-based strength (median) | 3 min | 18 min | 19 min |
| Degree (median), diary | 0a | 4 | 5 |
| Degree (median), sensor | 3 | 8 | 6.5 |
aOnly 1/6 participants reported contacts