Epidemics (Dec 2022)

Social contacts and other risk factors for respiratory infections among internally displaced people in Somaliland

  • Kevin van Zandvoort,
  • Mohamed Omer Bobe,
  • Abdirahman Ibrahim Hassan,
  • Mohamed Ismail Abdi,
  • Mohammed Saed Ahmed,
  • Saeed Mohamood Soleman,
  • Mohamed Yusuf Warsame,
  • Muna Awil Wais,
  • Emma Diggle,
  • Catherine R. McGowan,
  • Catherine Satzke,
  • Kim Mulholland,
  • Mohamed Mohamoud Egeh,
  • Mukhtar Muhumed Hassan,
  • Mohamed Abdi Hergeeye,
  • Rosalind M. Eggo,
  • Francesco Checchi,
  • Stefan Flasche

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 41
p. 100625

Abstract

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Background: Populations affected by humanitarian crises experience high burdens of acute respiratory infections (ARI), potentially driven by risk factors for severe disease such as poor nutrition and underlying conditions, and risk factors that may increase transmission such as overcrowding and the possibility of high social mixing. However, little is known about social mixing patterns in these populations. Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional social contact survey among internally displaced people (IDP) living in Digaale, a permanent IDP camp in Somaliland. We included questions on household demographics, shelter quality, crowding, travel frequency, health status, and recent diagnosis of pneumonia, and assessed anthropometric status in children. We present the prevalence of several risk factors relevant to transmission of respiratory infections, and calculated age-standardised social contact matrices to assess population mixing. Results: We found crowded households with high proportions of recent self-reported pneumonia (46% in children). 20% of children younger than five are stunted, and crude death rates are high in all age groups. ARI risk factors were common. Participants reported around 10 direct contacts per day. Social contact patterns are assortative by age, and physical contact rates are very high (78%). Conclusions: ARI risk factors are very common in this population, while the large degree of contacts that involve physical touch could further increase transmission. Such IDP settings potentially present a perfect storm of risk factors for ARIs and their transmission, and innovative approaches to address such risks are urgently needed.

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