AI Article Synopsis

  • Many countries used digital contact tracing during the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, but the role of cospace-time interactions (people in shared spaces at the same time) in virus transmission wasn't extensively studied due to insufficient data.
  • A study in Beijing during the Omicron outbreak analyzed 2,230 COVID-19 cases and 220,878 contacts, finding that contact patterns varied by location and that cospace-time interactions accounted for 38% of traced transmissions under control measures.
  • Without control measures, this type of interaction's contribution to virus spread dropped to 11%, indicating that public health strategies should balance the effectiveness of digital tracing with the complexities of tracing interactions in shared environments.

Article Abstract

While many countries employed digital contact tracing to contain the spread of SARS-CoV-2, the contribution of cospace-time interaction (i.e., individuals who shared the same space and time) to transmission and to super-spreading in the real world has seldom been systematically studied due to the lack of systematic sampling and testing of contacts. To address this issue, we utilized data from 2230 cases and 220,878 contacts with detailed epidemiological information during the Omicron outbreak in Beijing in 2022. We observed that contact number per day of tracing for individuals in dwelling, workplace, cospace-time interactions, and community settings could be described by gamma distribution with distinct parameters. Our findings revealed that 38% of traced transmissions occurred through cospace-time interactions whilst control measures were in place. However, using a mathematical model to incorporate contacts in different locations, we found that without control measures, cospace-time interactions contributed to only 11% (95%CI: 10%-12%) of transmissions and the super-spreading risk for this setting was 4% (95%CI: 3%-5%), both the lowest among all settings studied. These results suggest that public health measures should be optimized to achieve a balance between the benefits of digital contact tracing for cospace-time interactions and the challenges posed by contact tracing within the same setting.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11271501PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-50487-7DOI Listing

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