Should Schools Reopen if Kids Really Aren't Very Infectious?
04/25/2020
A+
|
a-
Print Friendly and PDF

How infectious are children? This is an important question, since it bears on whether or not to reopen schools, that we haven’t seen much research upon. With many contagious illnesses, school have long been notorious sites of spread. But so far schools have not been widely implicated as super-spreader sites with this new virus, which in turns ties back to the curious question of why so many things about this virus seem to correlate strongly with age.

Here’s an interesting anecdatum from The Guardian:

Boy with Covid-19 did not transmit disease to more than 170 contacts
Case of symptomatic nine-year-old suggests children may be less likely to pass on virus

Ian Sample Science editor, @iansample, Tue 21 Apr 2020 04.00 EDT

A nine-year-old boy who contracted Covid-19 in Eastern France did not pass the virus on despite coming into contact with more than 170 people, according to research that suggests children may not be major spreaders of the virus.

The boy was among a cluster of cases linked to Steve Walsh, the Hove-based businessman who became the first Briton to test positive for coronavirus after attending a sales conference in Singapore in January.

Walsh unwittingly passed the infection on when he joined 10 British adults and a family of five at a chalet in the ski resort of Contamines-Montjoie in the Haute-Savoie region after flying in from London.

Most of the chalet guests contracted the virus, but an investigation by Public Health France found that the nine-year-old did not pass it on to either of his siblings nor anyone else, despite coming into contact with 172 people, all of whom were quarantined as a precaution, and having lessons at three separate ski schools.

A report on the investigation published in Clinical Infectious Diseases describes how tests revealed the boy to be infected with Sars-Cov-2, the virus that causes Covid-19, and also influenza and a common cold virus. While both of his siblings caught the latter infections, neither picked up the coronavirus.

“One child, co-infected with other respiratory viruses, attended three schools while symptomatic, but did not transmit the virus, suggesting potential different transmission dynamics in children,” Kostas Danis, an epidemiologist at Public Health France told the French news agency AFP.

The boy had only mild symptoms and when tested was found to have levels of virus that were barely detectable. The low level of infection is thought to explain why he did not infect other people.

The researchers believe that since children typically have only mild symptoms, they may transmit the virus far less than infected adults. “Children might not be an important source of transmissions of this novel virus,” they write.

Why children generally escape the worst of the virus is not well understood, but many scientists suspect that their immune response is somehow able to clear the infections more rapidly than older adults, who tend to be hit much harder by the illness.

The report comes after researchers at UCL concluded this month that school closures would likely have only a small effect on the spread of the virus, and that this should be weighed up against the profound social and economic costs.

We need all the contact reports in the world made available to researchers. Google Translate appears to be amazingly good at translating many languages these days, so the idea of Western researchers reading through, say, Korean language accounts looking for patterns and, just as importantly, looking for Dogs That Do Not Bark, is more feasible than it would have been not many years ago.


[Comment at Unz.com]

Print Friendly and PDF