Abstract
AbstractBackgroundMillions of primary school students across the United States are about to return to in-person learning. Amidst circulation of the highly infectious Delta variant, there is danger that without the appropriate safety precautions, substantial amount of school-based spread of COVID-19 may occur.MethodsWe used an extended Susceptible-Infected-Recovered computational model to estimate the number of new infections during 1 semester among a student population under different assumptions about mask usage, routine testing, and levels of incoming protection. Our analysis considers three levels of incoming protection (30%, 40%, or 50%; denoted as “low”, “mid”, or “high”). Universal mask usage decreases infectivity by 50%, and weekly testing may occur among 50% of the student population; positive tests prompt quarantine until recovery, with compliance contingent on symptom status.ResultsWithout masking and testing, more than 75% of susceptible students become get infected within three months in all settings. With masking, this values decreases to 50% for “low” incoming protection settings (“mid”=35%, “high”=24%). Testing half the masked population (“testing”) further drops infections to 22% (16%, 13%).ConclusionWithout interventions in place, the vast majority of susceptible students will become infected through the semester. Universal masking can reduce student infections by 26-78%, and biweekly testing along with masking reduces infections by another 50%. To prevent new infections in the community, limit school absences, and maintain in-person learning, interventions such as masking and testing must be implemented widely, especially among elementary school settings in which children are not yet eligible for the vaccine.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference7 articles.
1. COVID-19 Vaccination and Case Trends by Age Group, United StatesVaccinations, data.cdc.gov/Vaccinations/COVID-19-Vaccination-and-Case-Trends-by-Age-Group-/gxj9-t96f. Accessed 10 Aug. 2021.
2. Face masks considerably reduce COVID-19 cases in Germany
3. Evaluating Scenarios for School Reopening Under COVID19
4. Buonsenso, D. , Espuny Pujol, F. , Munblit, D. , Mcfarland, S. , & Simpson, F. (2021). Clinical characteristics, activity levels and mental health problems in children with Long COVID: a survey of 510 children.
5. Buonsenso, D. , Munblit, D. , De Rose, C. , Sinatti, D. , Ricchiuto, A. , Carfi, A. , & Valentini, P. (2021). Preliminary evidence on long COVID in children. MedRxiv.
Cited by
12 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献