2017
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0170459
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Social Contact Structures and Time Use Patterns in the Manicaland Province of Zimbabwe

Abstract: BackgroundPatterns of person-to-person contacts relevant for infectious diseases transmission are still poorly quantified in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), where socio-demographic structures and behavioral attitudes are expected to be different from those of more developed countries.Methods and FindingsWe conducted a diary-based survey on daily contacts and time-use of individuals of different ages in one rural and one peri-urban site of Manicaland, Zimbabwe. A total of 2,490 diaries were collected and used to deri… Show more

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Cited by 100 publications
(180 citation statements)
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References 36 publications
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“…However, as argued in [11], the formulation of horizontal transmission adopted here, though simple, has the advantage of potentially capturing a whole range of processes triggered by fertility decline, namely the ageing of population in the groups most involved with horizontal transmission and also the ensuing decline of family size as an engine of the decline in intra-family horizontal transmission. In this study we modelled horizontal transmission by a WAIFW matrix as previously available for the study setting [30], being obliged to do so given that direct data on social contact patterns in SSA are so far available only for Eastern Africa [38], where socio-cultural patterns are believed to be markedly different from those of Western Africa and the setting considered. The lack of direct contact data in most of Africa remains a serious limitation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, as argued in [11], the formulation of horizontal transmission adopted here, though simple, has the advantage of potentially capturing a whole range of processes triggered by fertility decline, namely the ageing of population in the groups most involved with horizontal transmission and also the ensuing decline of family size as an engine of the decline in intra-family horizontal transmission. In this study we modelled horizontal transmission by a WAIFW matrix as previously available for the study setting [30], being obliged to do so given that direct data on social contact patterns in SSA are so far available only for Eastern Africa [38], where socio-cultural patterns are believed to be markedly different from those of Western Africa and the setting considered. The lack of direct contact data in most of Africa remains a serious limitation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Media broadcast news about cholera starting on day 21 onward (see: Ghana News Archive). During a simulation, household agents may also interact with their neighbors zero to seven times a day (applied randomly) [40]. When interactive learning was activated, social interactions among household agents helped to share information on cholera cases that occurred in their communities and on the effectiveness of coping decisions.…”
Section: Case Study: Cholera Diffusion Abmmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since then, much work has gone into better quantifying the amount of transmission-relevant contact occurring between different age groups. Diary-based studies have been conducted across Europe [9,10], as well as in Vietnam [11] China [12], Uganda [13], Zimbabwe [14] and elsewhere. While other methods for measuring social contact patterns exist [15,16,17], contact data from diary studies have become the de facto standard for studying age-specific infectious disease dynamics.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%