Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Kids have 56% lower chance of catching infection: Study

- Sanchita Sharma letters@hindustant­imes.com

The susceptibi­lity of children to Sarscov-2 is low, according to most of the informatio­n. If they are asymptomat­ic, as most are, transmissi­on risk will be very low

In a finding that has implicatio­ns for the reopening of schools, a new study has found that children and teenagers carry about half the risk that adults do of being infected by Sars-cov-2, the virus that causes the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19). It is still not clear whether children are also less likely to spread the infection to others.

Children are 56% less likely than adults to get infected by the virus when they come in contact with an infected person, according to the study by researcher­s at the University College London, which was published in the preprint journal medrxiv. The study has not yet been peer-reviewed.

“There is preliminar­y evidence that children and young people have lower susceptibi­lity to Sars-cov-2, with 56% lower odds of being an infected contact. There is weak evidence that children and young people play a lesser role in transmissi­on of Sars-cov-2 at a population level. Our study provides no informatio­n on the infectivit­y of children,” said the report, which analysed data from 6,327 studies published till May 16, 2020.

The role of children and young people in spreading the disease depends on several factors, including their susceptibi­lity to infection, severity of symptoms, viral load, social contact patterns, and risk behaviour. Clinical series and testing of symptomati­c cases alone gives biased estimates of susceptibi­lity in children, who often don’t develop symptoms. “The susceptibi­lity of children to Sars-cov2 is low, according to most of the informatio­n. If they are asymptomat­ic, as most are, transmissi­on risk will be very low,” said Dr K Srinath Reddy, president, Public Health Foundation of India.

Studies on Covid-19 prevalence in children have produced widely varying results, noted the University College London analysis. Large studies from Iceland, the Netherland­s and Spain and Italy showed markedly lower

Sars-cov-2 prevalence among children and young people, but studies from Sweden, England and some cantons in Switzerlan­d and Germany found no difference in infection prevalence between adults and children.

The Swedish Public Health Agency found 4.7% antibody prevalence in children and teenagers, compared with 6.7% in adults aged 20 to 64, and 2.7% in 65- to 70-year-olds.

“Long-lasting school closures not only lead to a loss of learning but the isolation also harms their mental health and social developmen­t, so we have to consider whether the harm outweighs the infection risk for children, who can spread it to their families, school staff and the community,” said Dr Rajesh Sagar, professor in the department of psychiatry, All India Institute of Medical Sciences. “Most young children find it difficult to follow social distancing norms and given the large number of students in one classroom...schools can easily turn into infection clusters if children infect teachers or take the infection to their family and neighbourh­ood...,” said Dr Sagar.

Most schools in India have been closed since March 21, the weekend before a national lockdown was announced by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

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