COVID-19 Transmission Within Danish Households: A Nationwide Study from Lockdown to Reopening

Publikation: Working paperPreprintForskning

Standard

COVID-19 Transmission Within Danish Households : A Nationwide Study from Lockdown to Reopening. / Lyngse, Frederik Plesner; Kirkeby, Carsten; Halasa, Tariq; Andreasen, Viggo; Skov, Robert Leo; Møller, Frederik Trier; Krause, Tyra Grove; Mølbak, Kåre.

2021.

Publikation: Working paperPreprintForskning

Harvard

Lyngse, FP, Kirkeby, C, Halasa, T, Andreasen, V, Skov, RL, Møller, FT, Krause, TG & Mølbak, K 2021 'COVID-19 Transmission Within Danish Households: A Nationwide Study from Lockdown to Reopening'. https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.09.09.20191239

APA

Lyngse, F. P., Kirkeby, C., Halasa, T., Andreasen, V., Skov, R. L., Møller, F. T., Krause, T. G., & Mølbak, K. (2021). COVID-19 Transmission Within Danish Households: A Nationwide Study from Lockdown to Reopening. Eurosurveillance https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.09.09.20191239

Vancouver

Lyngse FP, Kirkeby C, Halasa T, Andreasen V, Skov RL, Møller FT o.a. COVID-19 Transmission Within Danish Households: A Nationwide Study from Lockdown to Reopening. 2021. https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.09.09.20191239

Author

Lyngse, Frederik Plesner ; Kirkeby, Carsten ; Halasa, Tariq ; Andreasen, Viggo ; Skov, Robert Leo ; Møller, Frederik Trier ; Krause, Tyra Grove ; Mølbak, Kåre. / COVID-19 Transmission Within Danish Households : A Nationwide Study from Lockdown to Reopening. 2021. (Eurosurveillance).

Bibtex

@techreport{bd3c7a05cdc34eafa28e7f8ec203c6a9,
title = "COVID-19 Transmission Within Danish Households: A Nationwide Study from Lockdown to Reopening",
abstract = "Background The Covid-19 pandemic is one of the most serious global public health threats in recent times. Understanding transmission of SARS-CoV-2 is of utmost importance to be able to respond to outbreaks and take action against spread of the disease. Transmission within the household is a concern, especially because infection control is difficult to apply within the household domain. Methods We used comprehensive administrative register data from Denmark, comprising the full population and all COVID-19 tests, to estimate household transmission risk and attack rate. Results We studied the testing dynamics for COVID-19 and found that the day after receiving a positive test result within the household, 35% of potential secondary cases were tested and 13% of these were positive. After a primary case in 6,782 households, 82% of potential secondary cases were tested within 14 days, of which 17% tested positive as secondary cases, implying an attack rate of 17%. Among primary cases, those aged 0-24 were underrepresented when compared with the total population. We found an approximately linearly increasing relationship between attack rate and age. We investigated the transmission risk from primary cases by age, and found an increasing risk with age of primary cases for adults, while the risk seems to decrease with age for children. Conclusions Although there is an increasing attack rate and transmission risk of SARS-CoV-2 with age, children are also able to transmit SARS-CoV-2 within the household.",
author = "Lyngse, {Frederik Plesner} and Carsten Kirkeby and Tariq Halasa and Viggo Andreasen and Skov, {Robert Leo} and M{\o}ller, {Frederik Trier} and Krause, {Tyra Grove} and K{\aa}re M{\o}lbak",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1101/2020.09.09.20191239",
language = "English",
series = "Eurosurveillance",
publisher = "Centre Europeen pour la Surveillance Epidemiologique du SIDA",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "Centre Europeen pour la Surveillance Epidemiologique du SIDA",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - COVID-19 Transmission Within Danish Households

T2 - A Nationwide Study from Lockdown to Reopening

AU - Lyngse, Frederik Plesner

AU - Kirkeby, Carsten

AU - Halasa, Tariq

AU - Andreasen, Viggo

AU - Skov, Robert Leo

AU - Møller, Frederik Trier

AU - Krause, Tyra Grove

AU - Mølbak, Kåre

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - Background The Covid-19 pandemic is one of the most serious global public health threats in recent times. Understanding transmission of SARS-CoV-2 is of utmost importance to be able to respond to outbreaks and take action against spread of the disease. Transmission within the household is a concern, especially because infection control is difficult to apply within the household domain. Methods We used comprehensive administrative register data from Denmark, comprising the full population and all COVID-19 tests, to estimate household transmission risk and attack rate. Results We studied the testing dynamics for COVID-19 and found that the day after receiving a positive test result within the household, 35% of potential secondary cases were tested and 13% of these were positive. After a primary case in 6,782 households, 82% of potential secondary cases were tested within 14 days, of which 17% tested positive as secondary cases, implying an attack rate of 17%. Among primary cases, those aged 0-24 were underrepresented when compared with the total population. We found an approximately linearly increasing relationship between attack rate and age. We investigated the transmission risk from primary cases by age, and found an increasing risk with age of primary cases for adults, while the risk seems to decrease with age for children. Conclusions Although there is an increasing attack rate and transmission risk of SARS-CoV-2 with age, children are also able to transmit SARS-CoV-2 within the household.

AB - Background The Covid-19 pandemic is one of the most serious global public health threats in recent times. Understanding transmission of SARS-CoV-2 is of utmost importance to be able to respond to outbreaks and take action against spread of the disease. Transmission within the household is a concern, especially because infection control is difficult to apply within the household domain. Methods We used comprehensive administrative register data from Denmark, comprising the full population and all COVID-19 tests, to estimate household transmission risk and attack rate. Results We studied the testing dynamics for COVID-19 and found that the day after receiving a positive test result within the household, 35% of potential secondary cases were tested and 13% of these were positive. After a primary case in 6,782 households, 82% of potential secondary cases were tested within 14 days, of which 17% tested positive as secondary cases, implying an attack rate of 17%. Among primary cases, those aged 0-24 were underrepresented when compared with the total population. We found an approximately linearly increasing relationship between attack rate and age. We investigated the transmission risk from primary cases by age, and found an increasing risk with age of primary cases for adults, while the risk seems to decrease with age for children. Conclusions Although there is an increasing attack rate and transmission risk of SARS-CoV-2 with age, children are also able to transmit SARS-CoV-2 within the household.

U2 - 10.1101/2020.09.09.20191239

DO - 10.1101/2020.09.09.20191239

M3 - Preprint

T3 - Eurosurveillance

BT - COVID-19 Transmission Within Danish Households

ER -

ID: 297052830