Skip to main content
Advertisement

< Back to Article

Table 1.

The number of individuals and influenza cases in each type.

More »

Table 1 Expand

Table 2.

Frequency distribution table for compositions of households included in the retrospective data.

More »

Table 2 Expand

Fig 1.

A schematic illustration of household chain-binomial model.

Nodes in different colours correspond to different types of individuals (e.g., father, sibling, etc.). Transmission patterns are illustrated taking household i as an example. Coloured dotted edges represent the risk of external infection ε to each individual. Solid grey edges denote person-to-person transmission risk (PTR) from one type of person to another. PTR from type l to k is given as ρkl, which refers to the risk of transmission given that the individual of type l is infectious. Households have different compositions and ρkl may also vary according to the composition. On the other hand, ε is the risk from outside the household and thus assumed to be identical across households.

More »

Fig 1 Expand

Table 3.

Parameter estimates by the best model.

More »

Table 3 Expand

Fig 2.

Estimated risk of external infection and relative intensity of within-household contact.

(A) Estimated risk of external infection for each type of individual. (B) The estimated relative intensity of within-household contact. Values are scaled so that the median of contact intensity between adults is 1 (horizontal dotted line). Whiskers indicate 95% credible intervals (CrI).

More »

Fig 2 Expand

Fig 3.

Contact patterns and risk of infection in specific household compositions.

(A)-(C) Network graphs showing contact intensity between individuals for different household compositions: (A) “nuclear family”, (B) “many-siblings family”, (C) “three-generation family”. Node colours represent the type of individuals. Edges denote the relative intensity of contact (ckl) between individuals. (D)-(F) Risk of infection in households of different compositions stratified by source. Light grey: risk of infection from outside the household; dark grey: risk of infection from within the household. Whiskers indicate the 95% CrI. (G)-(I) Unconditional risk of infection and conditional risk given an introduction of infection into a household. Light grey: overall risk of infection for each individual in the household; dark grey: risk of overall infection conditional that a student is infected outside and introduces infection into the household. Infection of the student is considered given, and thus the conditional risk for the student is not shown. Whiskers indicate the 95% CrI.

More »

Fig 3 Expand

Fig 4.

The effective amount of contacts experienced by individuals (ηkl) in different household compositions. (A) Child; (B) Father; (C) Mother; (D) Other. The coloured compartments denote the breakdown of effective contacts allocated to each individual in the household, which corresponds to SITP given that individual is infectious.

More »

Fig 4 Expand

Fig 5.

The risk of primary/secondary infection to individuals in different household compositions and its source.

(A) Child; (B) Father; (C) Mother; (D) Other. The coloured compartments denote the breakdown of sources. Household compositions are displayed in the same order as Fig 4. The risk of primary infection in children was set to be 16.4%, the average between those of “students” and “siblings”. Note that the scale of the y-axis in (A) is different from the other three panels.

More »

Fig 5 Expand