In this investigation, families of the same size, two parents and three children, living in different circumstances of domestic overcrowding were visited at fortnightly intervals. The date of onset and the clinical nature of upper respiratory infectious experienced by each member of the family were charted on a time scale marked off in days. Family epidemics of acute coryza-or common colds-were thus available for analysis.
Epidemic_Cold
A data frame with 6 columns and 5 rows
Cases
No of Further Cases
Families
No of Families
Father
Father with Status of Introducing Cases
Mother
Mother with Status of Introducing Cases
SChild
School Child with Status of Introducing Cases
PSChild
Pre-School Child with Status of Introducing Cases
Extracted from
Heasman, M. A. and Reid, D. D. (1961). "Theory and observation in family epidemics of the common cold." Br. J. pleu. SOC. Med., 15, 12-16.
By inspection of the epidemic time charts, it was possible to identify new or primary introductions of illness into the household by the onset of a cold after a lapse of 10 days since the last such case in the same home. Two such cases occurring on the same or succeeding days were classified as multiple primaries. Thereafter, the links in the epidemic chain of spread were defined by an interval of one day or more between successive cases in the same family. These family epidemics could then be described thus 1-2-1, 1-1-1-0, 2-1-0, etc. It must be emphasized that although this method of classification is somewhat arbitrary, it was completed before the corresponding theoretical distributions were worked out and the interval chosen agrees with the distribution of presumptive incubation periods of the common cold seen in field surveys (e.g. Badger, Dingle, Feller, Hodges, Jordan, and Rammelkamp, 1953).
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