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2022-07-08Zeitschriftenartikel
Transmission of SARS-CoV-2 among children and staff in German daycare centres
Loss, Julika
Wurm, Juliane
Varnaccia, Gianni
Schienkiewitz, Anja
Iwanowski, Helena
Loer, Anne-Kathrin Mareike
Allen, Jennifer
Wess, Barbara
Schaffrath Rosario, Angelika
Damerow, Stefan
Kuttig, Tim
Perlitz, Hanna
Hornbacher, Anselm
Finkel, Bianca
Krause, Carolin
Wormsbächer, Jan
Sandoni, Anna
Kubisch, Ulrike
Eggers, Kiara
Nitsche, Andreas
Radonic, Aleksandar
Trappe, Kathrin
Drechsel, Oliver
Klaper, Kathleen
Franke, Andrea
Hüther, Antje
Buchholz, Udo
Haas, Walter
Wieler, Lothar H.
Jordan, Susanne
In daycare centres, the close contact of children with other children and employees favours the transmission of infections. The majority of children <6 years attend daycare programmes in Germany, but the role of daycare centres in the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic is unclear. We investigated the transmission risk in daycare centres and the spread of SARS-CoV-2 to associated households. 30 daycare groups with at least one recent laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 case were enrolled in the study (10/2020–06/2021). Close contact persons within daycare and households were examined over a 12-day period (repeated SARS-CoV-2 PCR tests, genetic sequencing of viruses, symptom diary). Households were interviewed to gain comprehensive information on each outbreak. We determined primary cases for all daycare groups. The number of secondary cases varied considerably between daycare groups. The pooled secondary attack rate (SAR) across all 30 daycare centres was 9.6%. The SAR tended to be higher when the Alpha variant was detected (15.9% vs. 5.1% with evidence of wild type). The household SAR was 53.3%. Exposed daycare children were less likely to get infected with SARS-CoV-2 than employees (7.7% vs. 15.5%). Containment measures in daycare programmes are critical to reduce SARS-CoV-2 transmission, especially to avoid spread to associated households.
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