Contact diaries versus wearable proximity sensors in measuring contact patterns at a conference: method comparison and participants’ attitudes

Type: Article

Publication Date: 2016-07-22

Citations: 72

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-016-1676-y

Abstract

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. We investigated the contact network of one day of an epidemiology conference in September 2014. Seventy-six participants wore proximity sensors throughout the day while concurrently recording their contacts with other study participants in a paper-diary; they also reported on method acceptability. There were 329 contact reports in the paper diaries, corresponding to 199 contacts, of which 130 were noted by both parties. The sensors recorded 316 contacts, which would have resulted in 632 contact reports if there had been perfect concordance in recording. We estimated the probabilities that a contact was reported in a diary as: P = 72 % for <5 min contact duration (significantly lower than the following, p < 0.05), P = 86 % for 5-15 min, P = 89 % for 15-60 min, and P = 94 % for >60 min. The sets of sensor-measured and self-reported contacts had a large intersection, but neither was a subset of the other. Participants' aggregated contact duration was mostly substantially longer in the diary data than in the sensor data. Twenty percent of respondents (>1 reported contact) stated that filling in the diary was too much work, 25 % of respondents reported difficulties in remembering contacts, and 93 % were comfortable having their conference contacts measured by sensors. Reporting and recording were not complete; reporting was particularly incomplete for contacts <5 min. The types of contact that both methods are capable of detecting are partly different. Participants appear to have overestimated the duration of their contacts. Conducting a study with diaries or wearable sensors was acceptable to and mostly easily done by participants. Both methods can be applied meaningfully if their specific limitations are considered and incompleteness is accounted for.

Locations

  • BMC Infectious Diseases - View - PDF
  • PubMed Central - View
  • HZI Open Repository (Helmholtz-Zentrum für Infektionsforschung GmbH) - View - PDF
  • Europe PMC (PubMed Central) - View - PDF
  • Spiral (Imperial College London) - View - PDF
  • HAL (Le Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe) - View - PDF
  • PubMed - View

Similar Works

Action Title Year Authors
+ PDF Chat Quantifying social contacts in a household setting of rural Kenya using wearable proximity sensors 2016 Moses C. Kiti
Michele Tizzoni
Timothy Kinyanjui
Dorothy Koech
Patrick K. Munywoki
Milosch Meriac
Luca Cappa
André Panisson
Alain Barrat
Ciro Cattuto
+ PDF Chat A systematic review of social contact surveys to inform transmission models of close contact infections 2018 Thang Van Hoang
Pietro Coletti
Alessia Melegaro
Jacco Wallinga
Carlos G. Grijalva
W. John Edmunds
Philippe Beutels
Niel Hens
+ Decision letter: Social contact patterns and implications for infectious disease transmission – a systematic review and meta-analysis of contact surveys 2021
+ PDF Chat Measuring contact patterns with wearable sensors: methods, data characteristics and applications to data-driven simulations of infectious diseases 2013 Alain Barrat
Ciro Cattuto
Alberto Eugenio Tozzi
Philippe Vanhems
Nicolas Voirin
+ Social contact patterns and implications for infectious disease transmission – a systematic review and meta-analysis of contact surveys 2021 Andria Mousa
Peter Winskill
Oliver J. Watson
Oliver Ratmann
Mélodie Monod
Marco Ajelli
Aldiouma Diallo
Peter J. Dodd
Carlos G. Grijalva
Moses C. Kiti
+ PDF Chat How should social mixing be measured: comparing web-based survey and sensor-based methods 2014 Timo Smieszek
Victoria C. Barclay
Indulaxmi Seeni
Jeanette J. Rainey
Hongjiang Gao
Amra Uzicanin
Marcel Salathé
+ Author response: Social contact patterns and implications for infectious disease transmission – a systematic review and meta-analysis of contact surveys 2021 Andria Mousa
Peter Winskill
Oliver J. Watson
Oliver Ratmann
Mélodie Monod
Marco Ajelli
Aldiouma Diallo
Peter J. Dodd
Carlos G. Grijalva
Moses Chapa Kiti
+ PDF Chat Collecting close-contact social mixing data with contact diaries: reporting errors and biases 2011 Timo Smieszek
E. U. BURRI
R. SCHERZINGER
Roland W. Scholz
+ A Systematic Review of Social Contact Surveys to Inform Transmission Models of Close-contact Infections 2019 Thang Van Hoang
Pietro Coletti
Alessia Melegaro
Jacco Wallinga
Carlos G. Grijalva
John W. Edmunds
Philippe Beutels
Niel Hens
+ PDF Chat A cross-sectional study measuring contact patterns using diaries in an urban and a rural community in South Africa, 2018 2021 Jackie Kleynhans
Stefano Tempia
Meredith McMorrow
Anne von Gottberg
Neil Martinson
Kathleen Kahn
Jocelyn Moyes
Thulisa Mkhencele
Limakatso Lebina
F. Xavier Gómez‐Olivé
+ PDF Chat Chapter 6 Digital tracing, validation, and reporting 2022 Ahmed Elmokashfi
Simon W. Funke
Timo Klock
Miroslav Kuchta
Valeriya Naumova
Julie Uv
+ PDF Chat Estimating Potential Infection Transmission Routes in Hospital Wards Using Wearable Proximity Sensors 2013 Philippe Vanhems
Alain Barrat
Ciro Cattuto
Jean-François Pinton
Nagham Khanafer
Corinne Régis
Byeul-a Kim
B Comte
Nicolas Voirin
+ PDF Chat Influence of Contact Definitions in Assessment of the Relative Importance of Social Settings in Disease Transmission Risk 2012 Kirsty J. Bolton
James M. McCaw
Kristian M. Forbes
Paula Nathan
Garry Robins
Philippa Pattison
Terry Nolan
Jodie McVernon
+ PDF Chat Correction: Estimating Potential Infection Transmission Routes in Hospital Wards Using Wearable Proximity Sensors 2013 Philippe Vanhems
Alain Barrat
Ciro Cattuto
Jean-François Pinton
Nagham Khanafer
Corinne Régis
Byeul-a Kim
B Comte
Nicolas Voirin
+ PDF Chat Social mixing patterns for transmission models of close contact infections: exploring self-evaluation and diary-based data collection through a web-based interface 2006 Philippe Beutels
Ziv Shkedy
Marc Aerts
Pierre Van Damme
+ Estimating Workplace Contact Networks, Adjusting for Reporting Errors 2013 Gail E. Potter
Timo Smieszek
Kerstin Sailer
+ Digital contact tracing, community uptake, and proximity awareness technology to fight COVID-19: a systematic review 2021 George Grekousis
Ye Liu
+ PDF Chat Measuring office workplace interactions and hand hygiene behaviors through electronic sensors: A feasibility study 2021 Paul N. Zivich
Will Huang
Alison R. Walsh
Prabal Dutta
Marisa C. Eisenberg
Allison E. Aiello
+ Contacts entre individus : analyse et application à l'étude de la propagation de maladies infectieuses 2016 Julie Fournet
+ Association of close-range contact patterns with SARS-CoV-2: a household transmission study 2023 Jackie Kleynhans
Lorenzo Dall’Amico
Laëtitia Gauvin
Michele Tizzoni
Lucia Maloma
Sibongile Walaza
Neil Martinson
Anne von Gottberg
Nicole Wolter
Mvuyo Makhasi

Works That Cite This (49)

Action Title Year Authors
+ PDF Chat A spatiotemporal simulation study on the transmission of harmful microorganisms through connected healthcare workers in a hospital ward setting 2021 Johan Magnus van Niekerk
Alfred Stein
M. H. Edwina Doting
Mariëtte Lokate
L. M. A. Braakman-Jansen
Julia E.W.C. van Gemert‐Pijnen
+ PDF Chat Close encounters between infants and household members measured through wearable proximity sensors 2017 Laura Ozella
Francesco Gesualdo
Michele Tizzoni
Caterina Rizzo
Elisabetta Pandolfi
Ilaria Campagna
Alberto Eugenio Tozzi
Ciro Cattuto
+ PDF Chat A systematic review of social contact surveys to inform transmission models of close contact infections 2018 Thang Van Hoang
Pietro Coletti
Alessia Melegaro
Jacco Wallinga
Carlos G. Grijalva
W. John Edmunds
Philippe Beutels
Niel Hens
+ Estimating the epidemic risk using non-uniformly sampled contact data 2017 Julie Fournet
Alain Barrat
+ PDF Chat Epidemic inference through generative neural networks 2022 Indaco Biazzo
Alfredo Braunstein
Luca Dall’Asta
Fabio Mazza
+ Projecting contact matrices in 177 geographical regions: an update and comparison with empirical data for the COVID-19 era 2020 Kiesha Prem
Kevin van Zandvoort
Petra Klepac
Rosalind M. Eggo
Nicholas G. Davies
Alex R. Cook
Mark Jit
+ PDF Chat Transmission of viral pathogens in a social network of university students: the eX-FLU study 2020 Paul N. Zivich
Marisa C. Eisenberg
Arnold S. Monto
Amra Uzicanin
Ralph S. Baric
Timothy P. Sheahan
Jeanette J. Rainey
Hongjiang Gao
Allison E. Aiello
+ Digital proximity tracing on empirical contact networks for pandemic control 2020 Giulia Cencetti
Gabriele Santin
Antonio Longa
Emanuele Pigani
Alain Barrat
Ciro Cattuto
Sune Lehmann
Marcel Salathé
Bruno Lepri
+ PDF Chat Droplet-Transmitted Infection Risk Ranking Based on Close Proximity Interaction 2020 Shihui Guo
Jubo Yu
Xinyu Shi
Hongran Wang
Feibin Xie
Xing Gao
Min Jiang
+ Infectious disease transmission: survey of contacts between hospital-based healthcare workers and working adults from the general population 2017 Lili Jiang
Isabel Hui Leng Ng
Yanan Hou
Dunli Li
Linda Wei Lin Tan
Hanley J. Ho
Mark Chen