The Guardian (USA)

Birthdays linked to spread of Covid in areas with high transmissi­on

- Natalie Grover Science correspond­ent

Households with recent birthdays were more likely to test positive with Covid in areas with high infection rates, according to an analysis of nearly 3m homes in the US.

The study, which emanates from health insurance claims data collected in the first 45 weeks of 2020 across the country, was designed to assess the potential risk of small gatherings on the spread of Covid-19.

The analysis showed that in places with low Covid prevalence, there was no evidence of any increased rate of infection in the weeks following birthdays.

But, in areas where the virus was circulatin­g in the community, households with recent birthdays were roughly 30% more likely to have a Covid diagnosis, compared with households with no birthdays.

In other words, in counties with high Covid transmissi­on, households with recent birthdays averaged 8.6 more cases for every 10,000 individual­s than households in the same counties without a birthday.

But the effect was even sharper when it was a child with a birthday – with an increase in Covid cases of 15.8 for every 10,000 persons in the two weeks following a child’s birthday, compared with cases in families without a birthday. In households with an adult birthday, the increase was 5.8 additional cases for every 10,000, according to the study published in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine.

The authors focused on birthdays as it was one of the key bits of informatio­n that can be gleaned from insurance claim data, and because it is an event where people could potentiall­y break with Covid policies about meeting other people indoors, suggested the study’s author Anupam Jena, a physician and associate professor of healthcare policy at Harvard Medical School.

Complicati­ng the picture is that the US response to the threat of the virus that causes Covid-19 has not been uniform across the country, with a patchwork set of restrictio­ns and mask-wearing policies being imposed (and relieved) at local, regional, and state levels, complicate­d further by difference­s in socio-economic, political, occupation­al and ethnic diversity.

But as lead author Dr Christophe­r Whaley, a policy researcher at the Rand Corp, pointed out: “Everyone has a birthday at some point in the year.”

The authors acknowledg­ed that they did not know whether households had celebrated birthdays, but that birth dates were used as a proxy for social gatherings and in-person festivitie­s.

In areas where there were shelterin-place [stay at home] policies, Jena said they expected there would be no “birthday effect”. However, the analysis suggested that even in such areas, the birthday effect was in line with places without such policies.

“It certainly does suggest that people weren’t adhering to the shelterin-place policies for this particular type of event.”

The analysis also highlights that many shelter-in-place orders were targeted towards formal large gatherings, noted Whaley. “I think it’s just natural to not think that your family or friends could transmit a horrible disease to you, and so maybe you let your guard down a little bit.”

 ?? Photograph: Kena Betancur/AFP/Getty Images ?? Children celebrate a May birthday in Central Park, New York, after Covid cases had dropped significan­tly compared with earlier in the year.
Photograph: Kena Betancur/AFP/Getty Images Children celebrate a May birthday in Central Park, New York, after Covid cases had dropped significan­tly compared with earlier in the year.

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