| Literature DB >> 34392254 |
Carol Y Liu1, Juliette Berlin1, Moses C Kiti1, Emanuele Del Fava2, André Grow2, Emilio Zagheni2, Alessia Melegaro3, Samuel M Jenness1, Saad B Omer4, Benjamin Lopman1, Kristin Nelson1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Physical distancing measures aim to reduce person-to-person contact, a key driver of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) transmission. In response to unprecedented restrictions on human contact during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, studies measured social contact patterns under the implementation of physical distancing measures. This rapid review synthesizes empirical data on the changing social contact patterns during the COVID-19 pandemic.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34392254 PMCID: PMC8478104 DOI: 10.1097/EDE.0000000000001412
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiology ISSN: 1044-3983 Impact factor: 4.822
FIGURE 1.PRISMA flow diagram for article search, title and abstract screening and full-text review. PRISMA indicates Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses.
FIGURE 2.Timing of contact surveys for each country with the Oxford Stringency Index (OSI) for stringency of physical distancing measures, time period of government-mandated lockdowns for context. Contact data collected during either government-mandated lockdowns or during the most stringent OSI in the spring of 2020 were classified as contacts during initial mitigation measures and data collected after the initial mitigation measures were classified as post-relaxation.
FIGURE 3.Changes in contact rates pre-COVID (dark blue), during initial mitigation measures in spring 2020 (black), 1-month post first relaxation of mitigation measures (gray) and 2+ months post first relaxation (light blue). stratified by contact location. Estimates during COVID-19 were extracted from studies, estimates pre-COVID were either extracted from studies or from SOCRATES.[24] No pre-COVID data stratified by contact location was available for Wuhan. X-axis limits for Netherlands (Backer) and Luxembourg were increased to capture larger pre-COVID contact rates. COVID-19 indicates coronavirus disease 2019.
FIGURE 4.Changes in contact rates pre-COVID (dark blue), during initial mitigation measures in spring 2020 (black), 1-month post first relaxation of mitigation measures (gray) and 2+ months post first relaxation (light blue), stratified by age group. Estimates during COVID-19 were extracted from studies, estimates pre-COVID were either extracted from studies or from SOCRATES.[24] No initial mitigation data was available for South Africa. X-axis limits for Shanghai, Italy, Netherlands (Backer), Luxembourg and Greece were increased to capture larger pre-COVID contact rates. COVID-19 indicates coronavirus disease 2019.
Description of Studies Included in the Systematic Review
| Reference | Article | Authors | Country | Study Subjects | Sample Size | Study Design | Collection Mode | Time Period |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 32 | The differential impact of physical distancing strategies on social contacts relevant for the spread of COVID-19[ | Del Fava et al | Belgium, France Germany, Italy Netherlands Spain, UK, US | Adults | 53,708 | Repeated cross-sectional | Online | 13 March to 13 April 2020 |
| 33 | The impact of physical distancing measures against COVID-19 transmission on contacts and mixing patterns in the Netherlands: repeated cross-sectional surveys[ | Backer et al | Netherlands | All age | 2,830 | One-time cross-sectional | Online | March to April 2020 |
| 34 | CoMix: comparing mixing patterns in the Belgian population during and after lockdown[ | Coletti et al | Belgium | Adults | 1,542 | Longitudinal | Online | 24 April to 30 July 2020 |
| 35 | Quantifying interpersonal contact in the US during the spread of COVID-19: first results from the Berkeley Interpersonal Contact Study[ | Feehan et al | US | Adults | 1,425 | Repeated cross-sectional | Online | 22 March to 21 September 2020 |
| 36 | Quantifying the impact of physical distance measures on transmission of COVID-19 in the UK[ | Jarvis et al | UK | Adults | 1,356 | One-time cross-sectional | Online | 24 March to 27 March 2020 |
| 37 | Evolving social contact patterns during the COVID-19 crisis in Luxembourg[ | Latsuzbaia et al | Luxembourg | Age 13+ | 5,664 | Repeated cross-sectional | Online | 2 April to 25 June 2020 |
| 38 | Lockdown impact on age-specific contact patterns and behaviors in France[ | Bosetti et al | France | Adults | 42,036 | One-time cross-sectional | Online | 10 April to 28 April 2020 |
| 39 | Modelling the SARS-CoV-2 first epidemic wave in Greece: social contact patterns for impact assessment and an exit strategy from physical distancing measures[ | Sypsa et al | Greece | All ages | 602 | One-time cross-sectional | Phone | 31 March to April 2020 |
| 40 | Changes in contact patterns shape the dynamics of the COVID-19 outbreak in China[ | Zhang et al | China | All ages | 1,193 | One-time cross-sectional | Phone | 1 February to 10 February 2020 |
| 41 | The impact of relaxing interventions on human contact patterns and SARS-CoV-2 transmission in China[ | Zhang et al | China | All ages | 9,205 | One-time cross-sectional | Phone | 1 March to March or 7 May to 15 May 2020 |
| 42 | The impact of COVID-19 control measures on social contacts and transmission in Kenyan informal settlements[ | Quaife et al | Kenya | Adults | 213 | One-time cross-sectional | Phone | May 2020 |
| 43 | Impact of social distancing regulations and epidemic risk perception on social contact and SARS-CoV-2 transmission potential in rural South Africa[ | McCreesh et al | South Africa | Age 15+ | 216 | Repeated cross-sectional | Phone | 3 June to 17 August 2020 |
aFor studies that collected data over multiple waves, sample size refers to participants from the first wave of data collection during lockdown.
bTime period described here refers to the entire data collection period presented in each study even if we do not present data for all waves of data collection.
cThe UK CoMix study continues to collect data on contact patterns in the UK. For this review, we include data from the published manuscript that presents data on only the first wave.
COVID-19 indicates coronavirus disease 2019; SARS-CoV-2, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2.