Tidak bergejala tetapi sebarkan Covid 19
People who didn’t know they had COVID-19
drove its spread in China
A new simulation shows
why rapidly expanding social distancing measures are crucial
Mild cases of COVID-19 that go unrecognized are fueling the
coronavirus pandemic, a new study of the early days of the outbreak in China
suggests.
It’s
this stealth transmission from undetected cases that U.S. officials are now
scrambling to limit with a slew of recently announced social distancing measures (SN: 3/13/20). On
March 16, the White House coronavirus task force advised people to avoid
gatherings of more than 10 people for the next 15 days. States including
Pennsylvania, Ohio and New York, as well as Washington, D.C., have shut down
bars and restaurants. And on March 17, a shelter-in-place order affecting close
to 7 million people in the San Francisco Bay area went into effect. Similar
efforts have been taken around the globe.
In
the new study, researchers used data on people’s movement in China from January
10 to January 23 to simulate how SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, spread before restrictions on
travel within the country and other isolation measures were implemented.
Undocumented cases — those occurring in people with mild or no symptoms —
accounted for an estimated 86 percent of all infections, the team reports
online March 16 in Science.
Those
undetected cases were less infectious — 55 percent as infectious, the
simulation found — than the known cases. But with high numbers on their side,
the hidden cases became the source for almost 80 percent of the diagnosed
infections.
“It’s the undocumented cases that are driving the spread and
growth of the outbreak,” Jeffrey Shaman, an infectious disease researcher at
Columbia University, said March 16 at a news briefing.
Shaman
and his colleagues simulated the spread of the coronavirus with data that
estimated the movement of people between 375 cities in China. The study focused
on the time leading up to the Chinese New Year in late January, a period when
people were traveling more and the virus moved through society relatively
unimpeded before the concerted response effort.
The
researchers also considered the impact of measures taken after January 23,
including travel restrictions between Wuhan and other Chinese cities,
self-quarantine recommendations and the increasing availability of testing.
With social distancing efforts to limit the spread of undetected cases, and more
testing to identify who was sick and isolate them, the tide turned: Documented
cases accounted for the majority — 65 percent — of infections.
The early days of the epidemic had set the stage. “By the time
travel restrictions and other social distancing measures were put in place,
there were already a large number of cases that were rapidly growing,” says
disaster epidemiologist Jennifer Horney of the University of Delaware in
Newark, who was not involved with the research. In the United States, “we’re
trying to ramp up those measures quickly to prevent that situation that we saw
happen in China, that we’re seeing happen in Italy.”
Italy,
which reported a single-day high of 368 deaths on March 15, currently is
experiencing a surge of severe COVID-19 cases that are placing an enormous
strain on the hospital system.
Even as testing becomes
more widely available in the United States (SN: 3/6/20), those with
symptoms and in higher-risk groups, such as older adults and people with
medical conditions such as diabetes, cardiovascular disease and respiratory
diseases, will need to get priority, Horney says. That will leave many mild
cases undiagnosed. “That’s why these rather strict social distancing measures
are being requested of people, because we can’t identify all the cases,” she
says.
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