2024-03-18Zeitschriftenartikel
Bus Riding as Amplification Mechanism for SARS-CoV-2 Transmission, Germany, 2021
Schöll, Meike
Höhn, Christoph
Boucsein, Johannes
Moek, Felix
Plath, Jasper
an der Heiden, Maria
Huska, Matthew
Kröger, Stefan
Paraskevopoulou, Sofia
Siffczyk, Claudia
Buchholz, Udo
Lachmann, Raskit
To examine the risk associated with bus riding and identify transmission chains, we investigated a COVID-19 outbreak in Germany in 2021 that involved index case-patients among bus-riding students. We used routine surveillance data, performed laboratory analyses, interviewed case-patients, and conducted a cohort study. We identified 191 case-patients, 65 (34%) of whom were elementary schoolchildren. A phylogenetically unique strain and epidemiologic analyses provided a link between air travelers and cases among bus company staff, schoolchildren, other bus passengers, and their respective household members. The attack rate among bus-riding children at 1 school was ≈4 times higher than among children not taking a bus to that school. The outbreak exemplifies how an airborne agent may be transmitted effectively through (multiple) short (<20 minutes) public transport journeys and may rapidly affect many persons.
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