Household transmission of the Delta Covid-19 variant in Queensland, Australia: a case series

20 September 2022, Version 2
This content is an early or alternative research output and has not been peer-reviewed by Cambridge University Press at the time of posting.

Abstract

Household transmission plays a key role in the spread of Covid-19 through populations. In this paper, we collected and analysed retrospective case report data and follow-up interview responses from households with a positive case of the Delta Covid-19 variant in Queensland in 2021. The overall secondary attack rate (SAR) among household contacts was 29.6% and the mean incubation period for secondary cases was 4.3 days. SAR was higher where the index case was male (57.9% vs. 14.3%) or aged ≤12 years (38.7% vs. 17.4%) but similar for adult contacts that were double vaccinated (35.7%) and unvaccinated (33.3%). Most interview participants emphasized the importance of clear, consistent and compassionate health advice as a key priority for managing outbreaks in the home. While vaccination did not appear to affect the risk of transmission to adult subjects, uptake in the sample was ultimately high.

Keywords

Covid-19
transmission
household
infectious disease management

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