A Mixed-Method Approach to Determining Contact Matrices in the Cox's Bazar Refugee Settlement
Joseph Walker, Joseph Aylett-Bullock, Difu Shi, Allen Gidraf Kahindo, Maina, Egmond Samir Evers, Sandra Harlass, Frank Krauss

TL;DR
This paper introduces a mixed-method approach combining surveys and agent-based modeling to derive contact matrices for refugee populations, exemplified by Cox's Bazar, addressing data gaps in vulnerable settings.
Contribution
It presents the first contact matrices for Cox's Bazar refugee settlement using a novel, resource-efficient method validated against traditional approaches.
Findings
Contact matrices show strong age-based banding effects.
Demographic profile significantly influences contact patterns.
Method performs comparably to traditional data collection in the UK.
Abstract
Contact matrices are an important ingredient in age-structured epidemic models to inform the simulated spread of the disease between sub-groups of the population. These matrices are generally derived using resource-intensive diary-based surveys and few exist in the Global South or tailored to vulnerable populations. In particular, no contact matrices exist for refugee settlements - locations under-served by epidemic models in general. In this paper we present a novel, mixed-method approach, for deriving contact matrices in populations which combines a lightweight, rapidly deployable, survey with an agent-based model of the population informed by census and behavioural data. We use this method to derive the first set of contact matrices for the Cox's Bazar refugee settlement in Bangladesh. The matrices from the refugee settlement show strong banding effects due to different age cut-offs…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 epidemiological studies · Mathematical and Theoretical Epidemiology and Ecology Models · Virology and Viral Diseases
