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Super-spreader Situations
07-30-2020, 03:57 AM
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#1
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Rio Grande Valley
Posts: 38,154
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Super-spreader Situations
Contact tracing seems to be working in some states and providing useful statistics:
From Maryland, where contact tracers found 44% of people who tested positive for the virus had recently attended family gatherings:
Quote:
CONTACT TRACING DATA. In addition to identifying individuals who may have been infected with COVID-19, Maryland is now using contact tracing data to find patterns of behavior, and to identify where and how the virus is spreading. The governor announced the following findings based on recent interviews conducted with COVID-19 patients:
Higher-Risk Gatherings (Percentage of Interviewed Cases):
Family Gatherings – 44%
House Parties – 23%
Outdoor Event – 21%
Higher-Risk Locations (Percentage of Interviewed Cases):
Work Outside the Home – 54%
Indoor/Retail Shopping – 39%
Indoor Dining at Restaurant – 23%
Outdoor Dining at Restaurant – 23%
Employment Information (Percentage of Interviewed Cases):
Health care – 25%
Other – Non-public Facing – 23%
Other – Public Facing – 13%
Restaurant/Food Service – 12%
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https://governor.maryland.gov/2020/0...avel-advisory/
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07-30-2020, 05:52 AM
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#2
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Administrator
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Chicagoland
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Thanks for the link. Family gatherings as the biggest source is no surprise. Similar conclusions from the early Asian reports.
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07-30-2020, 06:00 AM
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#3
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Rio Grande Valley
Posts: 38,154
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There are probably tons of these:
A NC family gathering of 2 dozen folks with no precautions resulted in 14 infections which then spread further:
Quote:
This set into motion a person-to-person contact chain that to date has spread COVID-19 to 41 people in 9 different families and 8 different workplaces,” McCracken said.
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Family gathering infects 41 people with the coronavirus, NC health official says
https://www.charlotteobserver.com/ne...244147427.html
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07-30-2020, 06:12 AM
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#4
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
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I was unpleasantly surprised at the results for outdoor dining and events. Up to now I'd considered outdoor dining less risky- in fact, the B&B where we stayed 2 weeks ago served all meals outdoors (with distancing, servers wore masks). I suppose "outdoor events" can cover a lot- a church service of 30 people, distanced with masks, or a beach volleyball tournament.
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07-30-2020, 06:38 AM
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#5
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
Join Date: May 2016
Location: Mid-Atlantic
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Quote:
Originally Posted by athena53
I was unpleasantly surprised at the results for outdoor dining and events. Up to now I'd considered outdoor dining less risky- in fact, the B&B where we stayed 2 weeks ago served all meals outdoors (with distancing, servers wore masks). I suppose "outdoor events" can cover a lot- a church service of 30 people, distanced with masks, or a beach volleyball tournament.
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Same, I found that alarming, as I've felt outdoor exposure was somewhat safer. I wonder how many of those cases were caught from a dining companion, who will usually be < 6 feet away and unmasked for a while when eating, vs. other diners or servers.
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07-30-2020, 07:09 AM
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#6
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Moderator
Join Date: Nov 2015
Posts: 13,927
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I think the proximity + mass + time factors overrides the environment.
You can be inside with 2 people @ 8feet for an hour, probably safer than you can be outside in a group of 20 mingling and talking and hugging and chatting for 2 hours.
Similarly, "outdoor dining" for me means me +1, well spaced from others, only briefly interacting with our server. It doesn't mean Party of 12.
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07-30-2020, 07:17 AM
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#7
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Rio Grande Valley
Posts: 38,154
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They are obviously not distinguishing between outdoor activities with or without masks and social distancing. So that makes it a bit hard to judge. The more specific case studies reported now and then seem to indicate that often there are no precautions taken at the family gatherings.
Here is an interesting graphic showing the spread from the NC study where no precautions were taken at the initial family gathering of ~24.
This probably tells a typical story!
You feel bad for all those co-workers!
Notice how in family B, the 9 year old child spread it to both grandparents. All the other spreading came from adults.
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07-30-2020, 08:29 AM
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#8
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Moderator
Join Date: Oct 2010
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I'd like a deep dive into the specifics of the outdoor and retail cases because those are activities I presumed were at least kind of safe-ish. I have been to a few outdoor "house party" type events, but with just a few people, and life cannot be sustained without a hardware store visit or two, but always with an N95 and fomite precautions.
If the data was collected with a form like "Which of these activities did you do in the last 14 days? (select zero one or more): went to work, indoor shopping, outdoor eating, indoor eating, etc, then I'm less worried about this report. My reasoning (warning, he's thinking again), if the subject was not being particularly careful, a lot of checkboxes would get checked. That doesn't mean each of the check boxes are equally likely to have been the transmission point.
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07-30-2020, 08:35 AM
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#9
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: West of the Mississippi
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Aerides
I think the proximity + mass + time factors overrides the environment.
You can be inside with 2 people @ 8feet for an hour, probably safer than you can be outside in a group of 20 mingling and talking and hugging and chatting for 2 hours.
Similarly, "outdoor dining" for me means well spaced from others, only briefly interacting with our server. It doesn't mean Party of 12.
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+1
A party of twelve crowded into one or two outdoor picnic tables and/or circulating about at close distances is not my idea of outdoor dining done safely. The big advantage of any outdoor activity is the ability of the air currents to dilute the virus. Crowding together at a picnic table works against good air circulation. I suspect that we would have also seen a lot of sharing of serving utensils, physical touching, and face-to-face up-close chatting. We need to see the movie, not just the snapshot.
People must constantly practice safety. Not only at crowded events, but daily even when only a few people are near us. Sadly, staying away form others still the safest thing to do.
Safety is a habit.
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Comparison is the thief of joy
The worst decisions are usually made in times of anger and impatience.
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07-30-2020, 08:48 AM
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#10
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
Join Date: Sep 2017
Posts: 1,110
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The outdoor dining concerns me too. We have not been going out to eat at all because the safety of outdoor dining experiences seem to vary depending on where it is. Some places are just too crowded.
Our area has been shut down for indoor dining for several weeks, but we are still having the majority of new outbreaks linked to restaurants/bars. I had assumed this was due to employees testing positive, but now I’m wondering.
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07-30-2020, 08:52 AM
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#11
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
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Location: Rio Grande Valley
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Quote:
Originally Posted by sengsational
I'd like a deep dive into the specifics of the outdoor and retail cases because those are activities I presumed were at least kind of safe-ish. I have been to a few outdoor "house party" type events, but with just a few people, and life cannot be sustained without a hardware store visit or two, but always with an N95 and fomite precautions.
If the data was collected with a form like "Which of these activities did you do in the last 14 days? (select zero one or more): went to work, indoor shopping, outdoor eating, indoor eating, etc, then I'm less worried about this report. My reasoning (warning, he's thinking again), if the subject was not being particularly careful, a lot of checkboxes would get checked. That doesn't mean each of the check boxes are equally likely to have been the transmission point.
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They mention interviews, so who knows how the data is organized, but it is the contact tracers collecting it FWIW.
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07-30-2020, 08:56 AM
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#12
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Join Date: Aug 2017
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I can't seem to find information about when one would test positive after infection. Hypothetically, I was near someone who tested positive yesterday. She/he transmitted Covid to me yesterday. When would I test positive?
Our county has a test turnaround time of 24/48 hours. Our numbers are skyrocketing. We were in a bubble, very few cases until recently (the last 14 days). Now the line to get tested is very long, everyday. We live near the testing site and I drive by there at least once a day.
I understand the load of transmission varies. And once infected there's nothing one can do to stop the symptoms or lessen the severity, that I"m aware of.
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07-30-2020, 09:59 AM
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#13
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I went to an outdoor restaurant recently for the first time since March. I used to eat in restaurants several times a week so losing that has been difficult. But I did not feel completely comfortable being there. The tables were spread out but it was still a lot of people to be around for a couple of hours. And there is nothing you can do to avoid the waitress and cook staff handling your dishes, glasses and silverware.
It does not completely surprise me that outdoor dining is not as safe as we thought it was. I’m going to avoid eating in restaurants for the time being.
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07-30-2020, 10:18 AM
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#14
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I can't imagine the outdoor dining I've done is any less safe than getting take out.
Two or three people to a table, same people as I would have eaten with at home. Tables were a minimum of 8 feet apart. Nice breeze. Server was masked and just delivered the food that was ordered at the counter.
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07-30-2020, 10:23 AM
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#15
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
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I imagine there are ways to do outside dining safely, and not safely.
If people from different households are getting together to eat at a table, removing masks to eat, and talking while masks are off, that can be a problem even if outside.
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07-30-2020, 10:24 AM
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#16
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Quote:
Originally Posted by GravitySucks
I can't imagine the outdoor dining I've done is any less safe than getting take out.
Two or three people to a table, same people as I would have eaten with at home. Tables were a minimum of 8 feet apart. Nice breeze. Server was masked and just delivered the food that was ordered at the counter.
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Yep, exposure = concentration x time. So a shorter time indoors where there might be more of the virus could be the same exposure as being outdoors around other people for a longer time. But you rarely if eve know who has it, and what concentrations might be in the air, so I try to minimize all exposure, and the rare times I'm indoors (other than at home) I make it as fast as possible and wear an N95 mask.
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07-30-2020, 10:30 AM
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#17
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Like everything else, some of the businesses are respecting the distancing outdoors more than others. I've seen way too much crowding outdoors. I should have taken a picture of what I saw last week near the NC coast. People just jammed in outdoors. We ended up leaving and ordering pizza.
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07-30-2020, 06:08 PM
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#18
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Good article in the Atlantic today about super-spreader situations. If interested, here is the link:
https://www.theatlantic.com/health/a...NDAwMTI2MjY4S0
Quote from the article:
Saskia Popescu, an infectious-disease epidemiologist, emphasized to me that we should not call these “super-spreaders,” referring only to the people, but “super-spreader events,” because they seem to occur in very particular settings—an important clue. People don’t emit an equal amount of aerosols during every activity: Singing emits more than talking, which emits more than breathing. And some people could be super-emitters of aerosols. But that’s not all. The super-spreader–event triad seems to rely on three V’s: venue, ventilation, and vocalization. Most super-spreader events occur at an indoor venue, especially a poorly ventilated one (meaning air is not being exchanged, diluted, or filtered), where lots of people are talking, chanting, or singing. Some examples of where super-spreader events have taken place are restaurants, bars, clubs, choir practices, weddings, funerals, cruise ships, nursing homes, prisons, and meatpacking plants.
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07-30-2020, 06:48 PM
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#19
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
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Location: Rio Grande Valley
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Thanks - very good article! Great overview of droplets versus aerosols and terminology that sometimes seems to have the WHO and other disease experts talking past each other. Clearly there is also some old versus new think going on as well.
To me “Super Spreader Event” implies one discrete gathering, like “XYZ turned out to be a super spreader event”, which is why I chose Super Spreader Situations to indicate the common environments in which COVID-19 seems to be so successfully contagious. But I see that the article uses that term for situations/environments. I almost titled this thread “Super Spreader Events” but that sounded like some things that had already happened.
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07-31-2020, 08:03 PM
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#20
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
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I had to copy this post from another Covid thread. Talk about a super spreader event! This CDC report was just released.
SARS-CoV-2 Transmission and Infection Among Attendees of an Overnight Camp — Georgia, June 2020
260 of 344 individuals who were tested following a summer camp were found positive - 76%! This included a large number of children. Trainees and staff had been there a week, then were joined by the young campers the following week. There were 597 attendees total. Some steps had been taken to avoid spread, but not all the recommendations. All trainees, staff members, and campers had to provide documentation of a negative viral SARS-CoV-2 test ≤12 days before arriving.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Birdie Num Nums
From a tweet I just saw: "NEW from CDC: COVID19 outbreak at an overnight camp in Georgia infects *at least* 260 campers & staff. -51% of positives 6-10yo -44% 11-17 yo -Camp required a test <12 days before arriving & attempted "pods" -Masks required for staff but NOT campers"
Source (CDC): https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/...cid=mm6931e1_w
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This virus keeps demonstrating that given the right environment/situation, it is just unbelievably contagious.
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