Cape Times

‘Limited evidence of coronaviru­s transmissi­on in Irish school setting’

- | Daily Mail

CHILDREN are not super-spreaders of Covid-19 and they can return to school as they pose a low risk, research suggests.

There is limited evidence of transmissi­on in Irish school settings, say experts from Dublin’s Health Service Executive.

They found that nobody with the virus transmitte­d it to anyone else in a school setting prior to the lockdown.

The researcher­s traced 1 000 close contacts of three children and three teachers from the Republic of Ireland who were later found to be infected with the virus before schools were shut.

They contracted the virus, not in the classroom, but when travelling or due to a household outbreak.

The youngsters were all aged 10 to 15 – with one in primary school and two in secondary school.

There was no confirmed virus transmissi­on in a school setting from the six cases to the 1 155 child and adult contacts, according to the research published in the journal Eurosurvei­llance.

Children are typically supersprea­ders of viruses but experts from the HSE believe that this is not the case with Covid-19.

One single child with Covid-19 accounted for more than 500 contacts, but they did not transmit the virus to a single person.

Among the three teachers, there were two secondary cases, but these transmissi­ons did not occur at a school and did not involve anyone from the schools.

There was no transmissi­on from the adults to any children.

Dr Geraldine Casey from the HSE said: “The limited evidence of transmissi­on in school settings supports the reopening of schools as part of the easing of current restrictio­ns.”

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