Litcius/Paper detail

Longitudinal social contact data analysis: insights from 2 years of data collection in Belgium during the COVID-19 pandemic

Neilshan Loedy, Pietro Coletti, James Wambua, Lisa Hermans, Lander Willem, Christopher I Jarvis, Kerry LM Wong, W. John Edmunds, Alexis Robert, Quentin J. Leclerc, Amy Gimma, Geert Molenberghs, Philippe Beutels, Christel Faes, Niel Hens

2023BMC Public Health16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: During the COVID-19 pandemic, the CoMix study, a longitudinal behavioral survey, was designed to monitor social contacts and public awareness in multiple countries, including Belgium. As a longitudinal survey, it is vulnerable to participants' "survey fatigue", which may impact inferences. METHODS: A negative binomial generalized additive model for location, scale, and shape (NBI GAMLSS) was adopted to estimate the number of contacts reported between age groups and to deal with under-reporting due to fatigue within the study. The dropout process was analyzed with first-order auto-regressive logistic regression to identify factors that influence dropout. Using the so-called next generation principle, we calculated the effect of under-reporting due to fatigue on estimating the reproduction number. RESULTS: Fewer contacts were reported as people participated longer in the survey, which suggests under-reporting due to survey fatigue. Participant dropout is significantly affected by household size and age categories, but not significantly affected by the number of contacts reported in any of the two latest waves. This indicates covariate-dependent missing completely at random (MCAR) in the dropout pattern, when missing at random (MAR) is the alternative. However, we cannot rule out more complex mechanisms such as missing not at random (MNAR). Moreover, under-reporting due to fatigue is found to be consistent over time and implies a 15-30% reduction in both the number of contacts and the reproduction number ([Formula: see text]) ratio between correcting and not correcting for under-reporting. Lastly, we found that correcting for fatigue did not change the pattern of relative incidence between age groups also when considering age-specific heterogeneity in susceptibility and infectivity. CONCLUSIONS: CoMix data highlights the variability of contact patterns across age groups and time, revealing the mechanisms governing the spread/transmission of COVID-19/airborne diseases in the population. Although such longitudinal contact surveys are prone to the under-reporting due to participant fatigue and drop-out, we showed that these factors can be identified and corrected using NBI GAMLSS. This information can be used to improve the design of similar, future surveys.

Topics & Concepts

BiostatisticsMedicineCovariateLogistic regressionSurvey data collectionCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)PandemicLongitudinal studyPublic healthDemographyDropout (neural networks)Data collectionGeneralized estimating equationNegative binomial distributionBinomial regressionStatisticsMathematicsComputer scienceDiseaseNursingPoisson distributionInfectious disease (medical specialty)PathologySociologyMachine learningInternal medicineCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesCOVID-19 Digital Contact TracingVaccine Coverage and Hesitancy