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Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Sex Differences in Social Contact Patterns and Implications for Tuberculosis Transmission and Control

Katherine C. Horton, Anne L. Hoey, Guillaume Béraud, Elizabeth L. Corbett, Richard G. White

2020Emerging infectious diseases61 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Social contact patterns might contribute to excess burden of tuberculosis in men. We conducted a study of social contact surveys to evaluate contact patterns relevant to tuberculosis transmission. Available data describe 21 surveys in 17 countries and show profound differences in sex-based and age-based patterns of contact. Adults reported more adult contacts than children. Children preferentially mixed with women in all surveys (median sex assortativity 58%, interquartile range [IQR] 57%-59% for boys, 61% [IQR 60%-63%] for girls). Men and women reported sex-assortative mixing in 80% and 95% of surveys (median sex assortativity 56% [IQR 54%-58%] for men, 59% [IQR 57%-63%] for women). Sex-specific patterns of contact with adults were similar at home and outside the home for children; adults reported greater sex assortativity outside the home in most surveys. Sex assortativity in adult contacts likely contributes to sex disparities in adult tuberculosis burden by amplifying incidence among men.

Topics & Concepts

Interquartile rangeAssortativityDemographyMedicineTransmission (telecommunications)Incidence (geometry)TuberculosisContact tracingMixing patternsYoung adultGerontologyDiseaseInternal medicinePathologyCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Mixing (physics)Electrical engineeringEngineeringWorld Wide WebQuantum mechanicsInfectious disease (medical specialty)Computer sciencePhysicsOpticsSociologyComplex networkRespiratory viral infections researchCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesInfluenza Virus Research Studies
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