PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - O le Polain de Waroux AU - S Cohuet AU - D Ndazima AU - A J Kucharski AU - A Juan-Giner AU - S Flasche AU - E Tumwesigye AU - R. Arinaitwe AU - J Mwanga-Amumpaire AU - Y Boum II AU - F Nackers AU - F Checchi AU - R F Grais AU - W J Edmunds TI - Characteristics of human encounters and social mixing patterns relevant to infectious diseases spread by close contact: A survey in southwest Uganda AID - 10.1101/121665 DP - 2017 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 121665 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/03/28/121665.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/03/28/121665.full AB - Quantification of human interactions relevant to infectious disease transmission through social contact is central to predict disease dynamics, yet data from low-resource settings remain scarce. We undertook a social contact survey in rural Uganda, whereby participants were asked to recall details about the frequency, type, and socio-demographic characteristics of any conversational encounter that lasted for ≥5 minutes (henceforth defined as ‘contacts’) during the previous day. An estimate of the number of ‘casual contacts’ (i.e. <5 minutes) was also obtained. A total of 568 individuals were included. On average participants reported having routine contact with 7.2 individuals (range 1-25). Children aged 5-14 years had the highest frequency of contacts and the elderly (≥65 years) the fewest (P<0.001). A strong age-assortative pattern was seen, particularly outside the household and increasingly so for contacts occurring further away from home. Adults aged 25-64 years tended to travel more and further than others, and males travelled more frequently than females. Our study provides detailed information on contact patterns and their spatial characteristics in an African setting. It therefore fills an important knowledge gap that will help more accurately predict transmission dynamics and the impact of control strategies in such areas.