Household transmission of COVID-19 according to index case: children, parents, and healthcare workers.
Joseane Mayara Almeida CarvalhoClarice Neves CamargoLuciano Kleber de Souza LunaAnna Clara RabhaDanielle Dias ConteRoberta Ferreira MarianoFrancisco Ivanildo de Oliveira JuniorGabriela Rodrigues BarbosaLuiz Vinicius Leão MoreiraAna Paula Cunha ChavesAna Helena PerosaNancy Cristina Junqueira BelleiPublished in: Brazilian journal of microbiology : [publication of the Brazilian Society for Microbiology] (2022)
The first SARS-CoV-2 intrafamilial transmission was investigated in China. We evaluated the dynamics of SARS-CoV-2 transmission in 242 individuals from 60 family clusters, including 30 healthcare workers (HCW) and 30 patients, in São Paulo city. Sixty index cases with COVID-19 were selected, being 30 HCW index cases from Hospital São Paulo (HSP) and its 93 household contacts and 30 index case patients from Hospital Infantil Sabará (HIS) and its 89 household contacts. Asymptomatic and symptomatic individuals participating were tested for COVID-19. The secondary attack rates in the family clusters of HCW and HIS patients were 37.63% and 68.54%, respectively. Considering all households, the transmission from adults to children was 55.4%, while the transmission from children to children was 37.5%. Children were more infected if the index case was an adult, suggesting that children were less competent to transmit. The average time for a household to be COVID-19 positive was 4 and 3 days for HCW and HIS patients. Although HCW have a higher risk of infection and social vulnerability, the secondary attack rate was lower than that observed for HIS patients, possibly because HCW are more aware of transmission risks than the general community.