Close X
Wednesday, November 6, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Study: Kids infected at day care spread coronavirus at home

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Sep, 2020 09:29 PM
  • Study: Kids infected at day care spread coronavirus at home

Children who caught the coronavirus at day cares and a day camp spread it to their relatives, according to a new report that underscores that kids can bring the germ home and infect others.

Scientists already know children can spread the virus. But the study published Friday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention “definitively indicates — in a way that previous studies have struggled to do — the potential for transmission to family members,” said William Hanage, a Harvard University infectious diseases researcher.

The findings don’t mean that schools and child-care programs need to close, but it does confirm that the virus can spread within those places and then be brought home by kids. So, masks, disinfection and social distancing are needed. And people who work in such facilities have to be careful and get tested if they think they may be infected, experts said.

Earlier research from the U.S., China and Europe has found that children are less likely than adults to be infected by the virus and are less likely to become seriously ill when they do get sick.

There also was data suggesting that young children don’t spread the virus very often, though older kids are believed to spread it as easily as adults.

In the new study, researchers from Utah and the CDC focused on three outbreaks in Salt Lake City child care facilities between April and July. Two were child-care programs for toddlers, and the other was a camp for older kids. The average age of kids at all three programs was about 7.

At two of the facilities, investigators were able to establish that an infected adult worker unknowingly introduced the virus.

The study concluded 12 children caught the coronavirus at the facilities, and spread it to at least 12 of the 46 parents or siblings that they came in contact at home. Three of the infected children had no symptoms, and one of them spread it to a parent who was later hospitalized because of COVID-19, the researchers said.

That kind of rate of spread — about 25% — is on par with studies of spread in households that have included both children and adults. It also shows that children with no symptoms, or very mild symptoms, can spread the infection, just like adults can.

Hanage cautioned that it's not clear whether the findings at the three programs are broadly applicable. Also, the study didn't involve genetic analysis of individual infections that might have given a clearer picture of how the disease spread.

But many infected kids experience mild illnesses and testing of children has been very limited, so it's likely that more than 25% of the outside contacts were infected, Hanage added.

The epidemic could get worse and more complicated this fall, said Dr. David Kimberlin, a pediatric infectious diseases specialist at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

“This should be another wake up call to all of us that we need to be diligent and all do our part,” he said.

MORE Health ARTICLES

Single protein behind successful fertilisation

Single protein behind successful fertilisation
An international team of researchers has discovered how a single protein oversees the processing of DNA during sperm and egg generation for successful fertilisation....

Single protein behind successful fertilisation

Ebola cases exceed 10,000: WHO

Ebola cases exceed 10,000: WHO
The World Health Organisation (WHO), in its latest report Saturday said the number of Ebola virus cases has exceeded 10,000, with 4,922 deaths....

Ebola cases exceed 10,000: WHO

As A Bad Virus Reaches The Big City, Some Questions And Answers About Hazards From Ebola

As A Bad Virus Reaches The Big City, Some Questions And Answers About Hazards From Ebola
NEW YORK - Now that a doctor in New York has been diagnosed with Ebola, health officials are once again stressing that the virus poses little risk in the U.S.

As A Bad Virus Reaches The Big City, Some Questions And Answers About Hazards From Ebola

Ebola's Evolutionary Ancient Roots Discovered

Ebola's Evolutionary Ancient Roots Discovered
A study discovered that filoviruses - a family to which Ebola and its similarly lethal relative Marburg belong - are at least 16-23 million years old.

Ebola's Evolutionary Ancient Roots Discovered

Dubai Selling Fun, Sun And Plastic Surgery To Wealthy Vacationers In New Medical Tourism Bid

Dubai Selling Fun, Sun And Plastic Surgery To Wealthy Vacationers In New Medical Tourism Bid

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates - Dubai, the emirate known for its celebration of over-the-top glamou...

Dubai Selling Fun, Sun And Plastic Surgery To Wealthy Vacationers In New Medical Tourism Bid

Let Kids With Asthma Keep Inhalers In School

Let Kids With Asthma Keep Inhalers In School
TORONTO - The mother of a 12-year-old boy who died after suffering a severe asthma attack at school wants all Ontario school boards to allow kids to carry their emergency inhalers with them.

Let Kids With Asthma Keep Inhalers In School