New Study Gives Insight into How Often COVID-19 Spreads through Households

Translate to Spanish or other 102 languages!

new study out in the Clinical Infectious Diseases journal demonstrates how quickly COVID-19 can spread through a household. Image for illustration purposes

Mega Doctor News

- Advertisement -

 By University of North Carolina School of Medicine

Newswise — CHAPEL HILL, NC – A new study out in the Clinical Infectious Diseases journal demonstrates how quickly COVID-19 can spread through a household, and provides insight into how and why communities of color have suffered disproportionately from the pandemic.

The observational study, conducted between April and October of 2020, followed 100 COVID-positive patients around the Raleigh, NC area and included a total of 208 additional household members. A household member was defined as someone who was staying in the same living space as the person who tested positive. Researchers tested other household members with PCR nasal swabs weekly for three weeks following the initial COVID case, or by a seroconversion antibody test at the fourth week. Excluding 73 household members who already tested positive for COVID when researchers got to their home, the secondary attack rate among household contacts was 32 percent.

- Advertisement -
Jessica Lin, MD

“We think this number is actually much higher,” said Jessica Lin, MD, the study’s senior author and assistant professor in the UNC Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases at the UNC School of Medicine. “Sometimes we were getting to households to test people four or five days after the initial COVID-positive person showed symptoms. By that time a lot of household members were already infected. But because that infection happened before we got there, we couldn’t include it in our data.”

This study also took place before the more infectious Delta variant was widely circulating in the U.S., leading Lin to believe the current secondary attack rate in households is significantly higher.

The majority of secondary cases occurred within the first week of the initial positive COVID test. Researchers found that these secondary cases shared a similar nasopharyngeal viral load, or the amount of virus a person had in their nose and throat.

“This means the viral load of the index case matters,” Lin said. “A higher viral load means it’s more likely that there will be secondary transmission in a household, and viral load is also an indication of how sick a person could get from the virus.”

- Advertisement -

The study also looked at living density – the concentration of people living within a household – as a factor that determined whether COVID spread to other household members. Of the participants enrolled in the study, 44 percent identified as Hispanic or non-white. Researchers found that minority households were more likely to experience a higher living density, and had a higher risk of secondary infection that white households.

“It’s very difficult to follow public health guidelines in some living situations,” Lin said. “If you have multiple people and generations sharing common areas or bedrooms, or say you are a single parent, it becomes nearly impossible to isolate or even physical distance.”

Lin says these findings all come back to one key message – vaccinations. The more people in a household that are vaccinated, the less likely the chance that secondary COVID infections occur. Even if one person is vaccinated, it helps, especially if the vaccinated person happens to be the first infection in a household. A person who has been vaccinated will most likely have a lower viral load, which will make it harder for the virus to infect other household members.

“Household transmission really is the main place where most people are getting COVID,” Lin said. “It’s spreading from their family and friends, people that are in their bubble and they feel safe with. When you get vaccinated, you aren’t just protecting yourself, you’re protecting those important people around you.”

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

- Advertisement -

More Articles

Teaming Up to Deliver Blankets and Comfort to Cancer Patients at DHR Health

Bert Ogden Subaru, in partnership with the Blood Cancer United, recently brought comfort and encouragement to patients receiving care at DHR Health’s Oncology Institute by presenting blankets and heart-shaped pillows to individuals courageously battling cancer.

How to Manage Back Pain on Your Next Vacation

As the travel season hits its peak, millions are preparing to spend hours on planes, trains, and in cars. That can dampen the excitement for the 1 in nearly 12 people worldwide who live with chronic low back pain.  But with proper planning, it is possible to travel without aggravating back conditions and enjoy a well-deserved break, say Hackensack Meridian Health orthopedic specialists.

STC and Roma ISD Secure $100,000 for Local Healthcare Training

South Texas College and the Roma Independent School District have been awarded a $100,000 Healthcare Internship Fund Grant that will support students pursuing careers in healthcare while completing their clinical training.

Starr County Healthcare Workforce Gets $100K Boost via New Internship Fund

Workforce Solutions (WFS) announced the launch of the $100,000 Healthcare Internship Fund, an innovative workforce development initiative designed to create structured, paid internship opportunities for 91 students pursuing high-demand healthcare careers across the region.
- Advertisement -