Selected article for: "infectiousness profile infer and symptom onset"

Author: Hart, William S; Maini, Philip K; Thompson, Robin N
Title: High infectiousness immediately before COVID-19 symptom onset highlights the importance of continued contact tracing
  • Cord-id: mbohtwaf
  • Document date: 2021_4_26
  • ID: mbohtwaf
    Snippet: BACKGROUND: Understanding changes in infectiousness during SARS-COV-2 infections is critical to assess the effectiveness of public health measures such as contact tracing. METHODS: Here, we develop a novel mechanistic approach to infer the infectiousness profile of SARS-COV-2-infected individuals using data from known infector–infectee pairs. We compare estimates of key epidemiological quantities generated using our mechanistic method with analogous estimates generated using previous approache
    Document: BACKGROUND: Understanding changes in infectiousness during SARS-COV-2 infections is critical to assess the effectiveness of public health measures such as contact tracing. METHODS: Here, we develop a novel mechanistic approach to infer the infectiousness profile of SARS-COV-2-infected individuals using data from known infector–infectee pairs. We compare estimates of key epidemiological quantities generated using our mechanistic method with analogous estimates generated using previous approaches. RESULTS: The mechanistic method provides an improved fit to data from SARS-CoV-2 infector–infectee pairs compared to commonly used approaches. Our best-fitting model indicates a high proportion of presymptomatic transmissions, with many transmissions occurring shortly before the infector develops symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: High infectiousness immediately prior to symptom onset highlights the importance of continued contact tracing until effective vaccines have been distributed widely, even if contacts from a short time window before symptom onset alone are traced. FUNDING: Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC).

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