1. Secondary attack rates in primary and secondary school bubbles following a confirmed case: Active, prospective national surveillance, November to December 2020, England.
- Author
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Powell, Annabel A., Ireland, Georgina, Baawuah, Frances, Beckmann, Joanne, Okike, Ifeanyichukwu O., Ahmad, Shazaad, Garstang, Joanna, Brent, Andrew J., Brent, Bernadette, Aiano, Felicity, Hargreaves, James, Langan, Sinéad M., Mangtani, Punam, Nguipdop-Djomo, Patrick, Sturgess, Joanna, Oswald, William, Halliday, Katherine, Rourke, Emma, Dawe, Fiona, and Amin-Chowdhury, Zahin
- Subjects
SECONDARY schools ,PRIMARY schools ,WHOLE genome sequencing ,SECONDARY school students ,GENE transfection - Abstract
Background: Following the full re-opening of schools in England and emergence of the SARS-CoV-2 Alpha variant, we investigated the risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection in students and staff who were contacts of a confirmed case in a school bubble (school groupings with limited interactions), along with their household members. Methods: Primary and secondary school bubbles were recruited into sKIDsBUBBLE after being sent home to self-isolate following a confirmed case of COVID-19 in the bubble. Bubble participants and their household members were sent home-testing kits comprising nasal swabs for RT-PCR testing and whole genome sequencing, and oral fluid swabs for SARS-CoV-2 antibodies. Results: During November-December 2020, 14 bubbles were recruited from 7 schools, including 269 bubble contacts (248 students, 21 staff) and 823 household contacts (524 adults, 299 children). The secondary attack rate was 10.0% (6/60) in primary and 3.9% (4/102) in secondary school students, compared to 6.3% (1/16) and 0% (0/1) among staff, respectively. The incidence rate for household contacts of primary school students was 6.6% (12/183) and 3.7% (1/27) for household contacts of primary school staff. In secondary schools, this was 3.5% (11/317) and 0% (0/1), respectively. Household contacts were more likely to test positive if their bubble contact tested positive although there were new infections among household contacts of uninfected bubble contacts. Interpretation: Compared to other institutional settings, the overall risk of secondary infection in school bubbles and their household contacts was low. Our findings are important for developing evidence-based infection prevention guidelines for educational settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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