The relationship between age and sex partner counts during the mpox outbreak in the UK, 2022

Understanding the dynamics of an infectious disease outbreak linked to sexual activity requires valid expectations of likely counts of unique sex partners during the infectious period. Typically, age is the key demographic trait linked to expected partner count, with many transmission models removin...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2023-09, Vol.18 (9), p.e0291001
Hauptverfasser: Brainard, Julii, Smith, Louise E, Potts, Henry W W, Rubin, G James
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Potts, Henry W W
Rubin, G James
description Understanding the dynamics of an infectious disease outbreak linked to sexual activity requires valid expectations of likely counts of unique sex partners during the infectious period. Typically, age is the key demographic trait linked to expected partner count, with many transmission models removing adults from the sexually active pool abruptly at a pre-specified age threshold. Modelling the rate of decline in partner counts with age would benefit from a better description of empirical evidence. During the 2022 mpox epidemic in the UK, we asked individuals about their partner counts in the preceding three weeks, which is about the same as usual infectious period for persons with active mpox. We used negative binomial regression (all responses) and Weibull regression (non-zero responses) to analyse the relationship between age and partner counts, adjusted for other demographic data (such as education level and occupation), sub-dividing by three types of respondent: men who have sex with men (MSM), men who have sex with women, and women who have sex with men. Most respondents had zero or one recent partner, all distributions were skewed. There was a relatively linear declining relationship between age and partner counts for heterosexual partnership groups, but a peak in partner counts and concurrency for MSMs in middle age years (age 35-54), especially for MSM who seemed to be in a highly sexually active subgroup. Useful data were collected that can be used to describe sex partner counts during the British mpox epidemic and that show distinctive partner count relationships with age, dependent on partnership type.
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source MEDLINE; DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals; Public Library of Science (PLoS) Journals Open Access; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; PubMed Central; Free Full-Text Journals in Chemistry
subjects Adult
Age
Algorithms
Analysis
Biology and Life Sciences
Communicable diseases
Computer and Information Sciences
Data collection
Demographic aspects
Demographics
Demography
Development and progression
Disease Outbreaks
Disease transmission
Distribution
Empirical analysis
Epidemics
Female
Females
Gays & lesbians
Gender identity
Heterosexuality
Homosexuality, Male
Human monkeypox
Humans
Infectious diseases
Influence
Male
Males
Medicine and Health Sciences
Men
Mens health
Middle Aged
Monkeypox
Mpox
Mpox (monkeypox)
Outbreaks
Partnerships
People and Places
Physical Sciences
Polls & surveys
Research and Analysis Methods
Sex
Sexual and Gender Minorities
Sexual orientation
Sexual Partners
Sexually transmitted diseases
Skewed distributions
Social networks
Social Sciences
STD
Subgroups
United Kingdom
United Kingdom - epidemiology
Women
Womens health
title The relationship between age and sex partner counts during the mpox outbreak in the UK, 2022
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