The Mercury News

WHO SPREADS THE VIRUS?

Reports show close, prolonged contact with family, friends poses biggest risk

- By Jack Lee jlee@bayareanew­sgroup.com

COVID-19 has sparked fierce debate about the risks posed by that careless stranger in the grocery aisle, post office or sidewalk.

But there’s a growing body of evidence that it’s close contact, often during gatherings of friends and family, that is driving the spread of the novel coronaviru­s.

Brief interactio­ns, like passing someone during a walk outside, don’t seem to be the primary force behind the pandemic, based on what we know so far from contact tracing studies.

“Studies indicate that close and prolonged contact is required for COVID-19 transmissi­on,” Dr. Muge Cevik, an infectious disease clinician and researcher at

Scotland’s University of St. Andrews, said in an analysis of COVID-19 clusters posted on Twitter.

“Early epidemiolo­gical studies suggest that most of the spread happens in groups of adults and usually indoors. The risk is highest in enclosed environmen­ts such as household, long-term care facilities and public transport,” she wrote. The highest risk is within the first five days of symptoms, she added.

There are increased rates of infection in enclosed, crowded and connected environmen­ts where people gather and spend time in close contact, such as households, social gatherings, churches, public transit and restaurant­s, according to Cevik.

Although casual, short interactio­ns are not the main driver of the pandemic, Cevik urged people to “keep social distancing!”

Here are some examples of how the coronaviru­s has spread:

HOUSEHOLDS >>

Compared with other contacts, people living in the same household as an infected person have a higher chance of being infected.

A study from Shenzhen, China, found that 11.2% of household contacts developed COVID-19, compared with 6.6% for all close contacts. Another study from China had similar findings: When checking the contacts of 105 COVID-19-positive people, the researcher­s found that 16% of contacts in the same household tested positive for the virus.

An Illinois woman with symptoms reportedly spread the virus to her husband. Of the 347 actively monitored close con

tacts who had interacted with these two patients, 43 developed symptoms and none tested positive for the coronaviru­s.

FAMILY GATHERINGS >>

In Chicago, the coronaviru­s was most likely spread from one infected person to other people — not from the same household — at a funeral in February and a birthday party three days later, public health officials say.

Both events were several hours long, and the infected person, who had symptoms, embraced others and shared food. In total, this one person caused six confirmed and nine probable COVID-19 cases.

GROUP GATHERINGS >>

Public health officials believe that one infected person spread the virus to choir members in Skagit County, Washington.

Of the 61 people who were at a 2.5-hour choir practice in early March, there were 32 confirmed and 20 probable COVID-19 cases.

RESTAURANT­S >>

In a restaurant in Guangzhou, China, one infected person may have spread the coronaviru­s to diners at two neighborin­g tables, according to a report. The tables overlapped for about an hour.

The report’s authors think that infectious droplets spread among the tables via airflow from the restaurant’s air conditioni­ng system.

HOMELESS SHELTERS >>

In early April, tests in a Boston homeless shelter showed that the virus had infected 147 residents, or 36% of the shelter’s population. In San Francisco, more than 100 residents of the MSC-South shelter had been infected by late April.

 ?? MARIO TAMA — GETTY IMAGES ?? Coronaviru­s art has popped up. Here, a mural by artist Pony Wave depicts two people kissing while wearing face masks in Venice Beach.
MARIO TAMA — GETTY IMAGES Coronaviru­s art has popped up. Here, a mural by artist Pony Wave depicts two people kissing while wearing face masks in Venice Beach.
 ?? PAULA BRONSTEIN — GETTY IMAGES ?? Group gatherings, such as a choir, can have a higher risk of coronaviru­s transmissi­on.
PAULA BRONSTEIN — GETTY IMAGES Group gatherings, such as a choir, can have a higher risk of coronaviru­s transmissi­on.
 ?? SPENCER PLATT — GETTY IMAGES ?? Public transport, where riders are in close contact, can increase the risk of coronaviru­s.
SPENCER PLATT — GETTY IMAGES Public transport, where riders are in close contact, can increase the risk of coronaviru­s.
 ?? JOHAN ORDONEZ — AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Homeless shelters have shown high infection rates among the residents.
JOHAN ORDONEZ — AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Homeless shelters have shown high infection rates among the residents.
 ?? DAVID RYDER — GETTY IMAGES ?? Group gatherings where people are in close contact, such as at public dances, can increase the risk of coronaviru­s transmissi­on.
DAVID RYDER — GETTY IMAGES Group gatherings where people are in close contact, such as at public dances, can increase the risk of coronaviru­s transmissi­on.

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