More evidence is emerging that coronavirus infections are being
spread by people who have no clear symptoms, complicating efforts to
gain control of the pandemic.
A study conducted by researchers in Singapore and published by the
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Wednesday is the latest
to estimate that around 10% of new coronavirus infections may be sparked
by people who were infected with the virus but not experiencing symptoms.
In response to recent studies, the CDC changed how it was defining the risk of infection
for Americans. The agency’s new guidance, also released Wednesday,
targets people who have no symptoms but were exposed to persons with
known or suspected infections. It essentially says that anyone may be a
considered a carrier, whether they have symptoms or not.
That reinforces the importance of social distancing and other measures designed to stop the spread, experts said.
“You have to really be proactive about reducing contacts between
people who seem perfectly healthy,” said Lauren Ancel Meyers, a
University of Texas at Austin researcher who has studied coronavirus
transmission in different countries.
The new study focused on 243 cases of coronavirus reported in
Singapore from mid-January through mid-March, including 157 among people
who hadn’t traveled.
Researchers found that so-called pre-symptomatic people triggered
infections in seven different clusters of disease, accounting for about
6% of the locally-acquired cases.
An earlier study in Hubei province, China, where the virus was first
identified, suggested that more than 10% of transmissions could have
occurred before patients spreading the virus ever exhibited symptoms.
Researchers are also looking into the possibility that additional
cases are triggered by “asymptomatic” people who are infected but never
develop clear-cut symptoms, and “post-symptomatic” people who got sick,
appear to be recovered, but may still be contagious.
It remains unclear how many new infections are caused by each type of
these potential spreaders, said Meyers, who was not involved in the
Singapore study but was part of an earlier one focused on China.
CDC officials say they’ve been researching asymptomatic and pre-symptomatic infections, but the studies are not complete.
In the initial months of the pandemic, health officials
based their response on the belief that most of the spread came from
people who were sneezing or coughing droplets that contained the virus.
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