USA TODAY International Edition

Super spreader events can take their toll

Rose Garden ceremony for Barrett in spotlight

- Jorge L. Ortiz

Signs point to the ceremony to nominate Amy Coney Barrett for the Supreme Court on Sept. 26 as the source of the coronaviru­s infections afflicting President Donald Trump and many members of his inner circle, including wife Melania, former White House counselor Kellyanne Conway and Trump adviser Chris Christie, former governor of New Jersey.

Though the activity was held outside at the Rose Garden, the majority of the 180- plus people in attendance sat close to each other for an extended period, and most didn’t wear masks. There were smaller indoor gatherings as part of the occasion.

That combinatio­n may have resulted in a super spreader event, the type that leads to a cluster of infections. Others at the ceremony who tested positive for the virus include GOP Sens. Mike Lee of Utah and Thom Tillis of North Carolina; John Jenkins, president of Notre Dame University; and a reporter covering the announceme­nt.

What’s a super spreader event?

There’s no precise definition, but generally speaking, it’s a gathering that results in a much larger rate of transmissi­on than the norm. As few as 10%- 20% of the carriers may be responsibl­e for up to 80% of new transmissi­ons, according to some studies.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says these events “are associated with both explosive growth early in an outbreak and sustained transmissi­on in later stages.’’

The Nebraska Medical Center lists three “V’s” as common factors in super spreaders:

Venue: Almost always inside, where h research indicates transmissi­on is 18 times more likely than outdoors. In the case of the nomination announceme­nt, the indoor gatherings and close conversati­ons at the Rose Garden among attendees without masks might have been the primary culprits.

Ventilatio­n: Lack of circulatin­g fresh h air makes it easier for the virus to be inhaled.

Vocalizati­on: Talking, especially h loudly, and singing can aerosolize the virus.

How do these events happen?

George Rutherford, an infectious disease specialist at the University of California- San Francisco who heads the state’s contact tracing program, said they’re mostly a matter of people being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

“Anyone with SARS- CoV- 2 infection is most infectious for a relatively short period of time – like 3- 4 days, starting one day before symptom onset ( or roughly 4 days after exposure),” Rutherford said via e- mail. “If someone who is in this infectious period comes into close contact with someone who is susceptibl­e, there can be transmissi­on. Supersprea­ding is where someone who is infectious comes into close contact with lots of susceptibl­e people in a relatively short time.”

What other super spreader events do we know of?

Perhaps the most notorious one was a motorcycle rally Aug. 7- 16 in Sturgis, South Dakota, which drew about 462,000 enthusiast­s despite warnings from public health experts. There have been conflictin­g reports about the number of cases that emanated from the rally.

South Dakota officials said in September that 124 state residents tested positive, a figure that doesn’t count those from out of state or whomever they infected. The Associated Press reported finding 290 cases nationally from the rally. Regardless, the 10- day activity was a major source of infections.

Other super spreaders include a choir practice in March in Washington state linked to 52 cases, a wedding in August in Maine that led to 170 infections and seven deaths and a sleepaway camp in June in Georgia tied to at least 260 positive tests. Several outbreaks have been connected to fraternity and sorority parties on college campuses.

How to prevent them?

Since the beginning of the pandemic, public health officials have warned against large gatherings – even at outdoor venues – which is why sporting events, concerts and similar mass activities were canceled.

Research has shown that even smaller get- togethers can provoke an outbreak, and experts suggested socializin­g should be done in limited numbers, outdoors and ideally at a distance and with masks, which are obviously impractica­l when eating and drinking are involved.

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