Transmission of COVID-19 is high before and immediately after
symptoms begin to show in a person infected with the new coronavirus, a study published in JAMA Internal Medicine shows.
For the study, researchers examined 100 initial patients with
confirmed cases of COVID-19 and their contacts in Taiwan. They studied
2,761 close contacts of the 100 initial cases. All close contacts were
quarantined at home for 14 days after their last exposure to the initial
case.
The overall secondary clinical attack rate (that is, rate of new cases among close contacts) was 0.7 percent.
Researchers found that the attack rate was higher among the 1,818
contacts who were exposed to the initial COVID-19 patients within five
days of symptom onset, compared to those who were exposed later. The 299
contacts exposed to the initial COVID-19 patients before their symptoms
began were also at higher risk of infection.
“In this study, high transmissibility of COVID-19 before and
immediately after symptom onset suggests that finding and isolating
symptomatic patients alone may not suffice to contain the epidemic, and
more generalized measures may be required, such as social distancing,”
researchers wrote.
https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/infection-control/covid-19-patients-most-infectious-before-right-after-symptom-onset-study-finds.html
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