Texarkana Gazette

Covid question

What do we know about supersprea­der events in the pandemic?

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We’re still learning, but it seems that much of the spread of the coronaviru­s has been caused by what disease trackers call supersprea­der events.

That’s when a single person infects a large number of other people, or when a gathering is linked to a large number of cases. There’s no rule for when a cluster of cases is big enough to be called a supersprea­der event. But these are not instances of spread within one household. Instead, these are large clusters of cases where infection occurs in settings such as churches, restaurant­s or bars.

In the United States, for instance, a choir member with symptoms attended a rehearsal in March. Of 60 others who attended, 52 got sick with covid-19, including two who died.

In Hong Kong, an outbreak at four bars infected 39 customers, 20 staff members and 14 musicians before ballooning further to infect 33 family members and other contacts. Disease trackers discovered that bands played at all four bars, so musicians may have spread the virus to more than 100 people all told.

Scientists studying three months of contact tracing data from Hong Kong estimated that 19% of people infected were responsibl­e for 80% of the spread of coronaviru­s infections.

To prevent supersprea­der events, we need to better understand them, said Anne Rimoin, an infectious diseases expert at the University of California, Los Angeles.

She has called for detailed contact tracing of the infections around President Donald Trump, including those who attended a Sept. 26 Rose Garden ceremony and indoor White House reception for Supreme Court nominee Judge Amy Coney Barrett. The timing of the event and the number of people infected suggests the possibilit­y of supersprea­ding, she said.

“Contact tracing is the way you get to the bottom of a supersprea­der event,” Rimoin said. “That’s how you break chains of transmissi­on.”

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