COVID-19 household transmission is high, with children being a significant source of spread: study

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Young Asian boy sick in bed
A study released today indicates that SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) spreads extensively in households, with children being a significant source of that spread. Approximately 50% of household members were infected from the first-infected individual during the study period. Although kids were less likely to spread the virus compared to adults, children and adults were equally likely to become infected from the first-infected individual.

The antibody surveillance study “Household transmission of SARS-CoV-2 from unvaccinated asymptomatic and symptomatic household members with confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection”north_eastexternal link published in CMAJ Open (Canadian Medical Association Journal) included 695 participants from 180 households in Ottawa between September 2020 and March 2021. The study included households with at least one member having had a confirmed COVID-19 infection, and each participating household enrolled had at least one child within their household.

“Our study was conducted when we were dealing with a less transmissible virus and pandemic restrictions were strongly in place, and we still had a 50% transmission rate within households. Flash forward to where we are today with an extremely transmissible variant of COVID-19 and the majority of pandemic restrictions lifted; it’s safe to say transmission rates will be higher even though we have a high vaccination rate amongst those who are eligible,” said Dr. Maala Bhatt, the study’s lead author and Associate Professor of Pediatrics in the Faculty of Medicine. 

“I know many want to ‘live with COVID’ and abandon the layers of protection that were previously mandated, but it’s important to be aware of the high transmissibility of this virus in closed, indoor settings, such as schools.  Our most vulnerable and our youngest children who are not yet able to be vaccinated are still at risk for COVID infection.”

Dr. Maala Bhatt

“Many want to ‘live with COVID’ but it’s important to be aware of the high transmissibility of this virus in closed, indoor settings, such as schools.”

Dr. Maala Bhatt

— Study’s lead author and Associate Professor of Pediatrics in the Faculty of Medicine

The level of COVID-19 in Eastern Ontario is on the rise. The COVID-19 wastewater viral signal in Ottawa is at record levels. In addition, test per cent positivity across the region is high, according to regional public health units. In recent weeks, the number of COVID-19 positive admissions to CHEO has been approaching the levels seen in January and early February. Three-quarters of all children admitted to CHEO with COVID-19 have come during the Omicron wave. Since the beginning of January one in three of the roughly 4,900 monthly visits to the Emergency Department were for symptoms associated with COVID-19.

The study hypothesized that children would act as “an even greater source of spread within households with the emergence of more infectious variants.” Children also have “considerable potential to spread” in settings such as school and daycare, where they congregate indoors for long periods, especially now when masking is not required in many jurisdictions.

“While we’re lucky hospitals aren’t currently overloaded, emergency departments are and positivity rates are on the rise, even amongst children,” said Dr. Bhattnorth_eastexternal link, pediatric emergency physician and Director of Emergency Medicine Research at CHEO and an Investigator at the CHEO Research Institute.

“We continue to learn more about COVID-19 and its potential long-term health impacts, and we still aren’t clear about how long immunity lasts; these are all things researchers continue to study. As significant COVID-19 transmission continues within households and throughout the community, it’s important to continue doing what you can to keep yourself and those around you safe – mask while indoors, wash your hands, get vaccinated with all the doses you are eligible for, stay home if you’re sick, and limit close contacts.”

The Ottawa families who participated were integral to this study, as well as the Langlois Laboratory at the University of Ottawa, led by Dr. Marc-André Langlois, Executive Director of CoVaar-Net. Funding for this study came from the Ontario COVID-19 Rapid Research Fund, PSI Foundation and Children’s Hospital Academic Medical Organization (CHAMO) Innovation Fund.

Reference: Maala Bhatt MD MSc, Amy C. Plint MD MSc, Ken Tang PhD, Richard Malley MD, Anne Pham Huy MD, Candice McGahern BA, Jennifer Dawson PhD, Martin Pelchat PhD, Lauren Dawson MSc, Terry Varshney MD, Corey Arnold PhD, Yannick Galipeau BSc, Michael Austin MD, Nisha Thampi MD, Fuad Alnaji MD, Marc-André Langlois PhD, Roger L. Zemek MD. Household transmission of SARS-CoV-2 from unvaccinated asymptomatic and symptomatic household members with confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection: an antibody- surveillance study. CMAJ Open 2022 April 12. DOI:10.9778/cmajo.20220026

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