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Colonization and transmission of in schools: a citizen science project. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Aggregation of children in schools significantly contributes to the spread of infectious diseases, but self-reported contact data lacks a strong link to pathogen transmission.
  • Researchers conducted a study in two secondary schools in England, using students' social contact surveys and genetic analysis of bacteria to explore this relationship.
  • The study found that while direct transmission within schools is infrequent, higher colonization rates suggest school-age children could be key contributors to community transmission.

Article Abstract

Aggregation of children in schools has been established to be a key driver of transmission of infectious diseases. Mathematical models of transmission used to predict the impact of control measures, such as vaccination and testing, commonly depend on self-reported contact data. However, the link between self-reported social contacts and pathogen transmission has not been well described. To address this, we used as a model organism to track transmission within two secondary schools in England and test for associations between self-reported social contacts, test positivity and the bacterial strain collected from the same students. Students filled out a social contact survey and their colonization status was ascertained through self-administered swabs from which isolates were sequenced. Isolates from the local community were also sequenced to assess the representativeness of school isolates. A low frequency of genome-linked transmission precluded a formal analysis of links between genomic and social networks, suggesting that transmission within schools is too rare to make it a viable tool for this purpose. Whilst we found no evidence that schools are an important route of transmission, increased colonization rates found within schools imply that school-age children may be an important source of community transmission.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10210949PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mgen.0.000993DOI Listing

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