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Coronavirus: What is the k number and can superspreading be stopped? | |
(3 days later) | |
As the world races to find treatments and vaccines for coronavirus, scientists have another target in their sites - the superspreading event, when one person infects many others. | As the world races to find treatments and vaccines for coronavirus, scientists have another target in their sites - the superspreading event, when one person infects many others. |
And there is a new number that's key to understanding why that happens. | |
What is the k number? | |
During the pandemic, there has been a focus on the reproduction or R number. This is the number of people that one infected person will pass on the virus to, on average. | |
However, not every person with coronavirus passes it on to the same number of people. Some may self-isolate and infect nobody, while others go about their life and infect many people. | |
This is where the k number is useful. It measures the difference in how many people each person with coronavirus infects. | |
The smaller the k number is, the lower the number of people who are transmitting the disease to others is. This means more superspreaders, each individually infecting higher numbers of people. | |
About 10-15% of people are responsible for about 80% of infections, according to an expert. | |
Dr Adam Kucharski, of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM), says: "Typically, what happens is a lot of people don't give the infection to anyone. | |
"And then there's a handful of events where you see large amounts of transmission happening with five, 10, 20 people potentially infected. And we saw that even quite early on with Covid." | |
Why does superspreading happen? | Why does superspreading happen? |
Covid-19 is passed on through people shedding virus particles from their bodies. | Covid-19 is passed on through people shedding virus particles from their bodies. |
How infectious someone is depends on many factors that differ dramatically from person to person, including: | How infectious someone is depends on many factors that differ dramatically from person to person, including: |
But it is what they do when they are at their most infectious that really drives superspreading events. | |
"If someone, when they're most transmissible, happens to go to an all-day meeting with a large number of people, and then go out for dinner afterwards, you may well see a superspreading event," Dr Kucharski says. | |
"If that person happened to have an evening at home, it might not have generated any transmission." | "If that person happened to have an evening at home, it might not have generated any transmission." |
Where is superspreading happening? | Where is superspreading happening? |
Scientists have been keeping track of clusters of Covid-19 since the pandemic began. | Scientists have been keeping track of clusters of Covid-19 since the pandemic began. |
Dr Gwen Knight, from LSHTM, says: "We found that many of the settings are what we expected. | Dr Gwen Knight, from LSHTM, says: "We found that many of the settings are what we expected. |
"So care settings - hospitals and care homes - unfortunately, are coming up. | "So care settings - hospitals and care homes - unfortunately, are coming up. |
"And also cruise ships, which is something we know from other infectious diseases." | "And also cruise ships, which is something we know from other infectious diseases." |
But she also found clusters repeatedly appearing in other places - meat-processing plants, choirs, bars and gyms. | But she also found clusters repeatedly appearing in other places - meat-processing plants, choirs, bars and gyms. |
All of these involve being indoors, in close contact with others, for prolonged periods of time. | All of these involve being indoors, in close contact with others, for prolonged periods of time. |
But Dr Knight says there is another common thread. | But Dr Knight says there is another common thread. |
"These settings are likely to be loud settings, and obviously, that has an impact on the kind of breathing you do," she says. | |
"There is the hypothesis that because it's loud, and you're expelling more or faster air, it could be this that makes the setting more and more risky. | "There is the hypothesis that because it's loud, and you're expelling more or faster air, it could be this that makes the setting more and more risky. |
"There were several clusters linked to fitness classes in South Korea, and more were linked to Zumba classes than to pilates classes. | |
"So it might be that you're engaged in an exercise that requires you to breathe more heavily and deeper, as opposed to a more gentle breathing, for example." | "So it might be that you're engaged in an exercise that requires you to breathe more heavily and deeper, as opposed to a more gentle breathing, for example." |
Can superspreading happen outside? | Can superspreading happen outside? |
Dr Muge Cevik, of the University of St Andrews, says: "Not all activities, not all environments have the same risk of infection. | Dr Muge Cevik, of the University of St Andrews, says: "Not all activities, not all environments have the same risk of infection. |
"So, for example, the risk of infection would be higher indoors compared to outdoors. | "So, for example, the risk of infection would be higher indoors compared to outdoors. |
"Outdoors, generally people worry about cyclists or runners passing by - but that would be lower risk. We could say the transmission risk is negligible. | |
"Whereas if you spend a whole day together, in a big group in a park, and if you exchange lots of food and you have really close contact, less than 2m (6ft), the risk is lower than being indoors - but there is still risk." | |
Hand-washing, social distancing and not sharing utensils is essential, she says. | Hand-washing, social distancing and not sharing utensils is essential, she says. |
How can understanding superspreading help? | How can understanding superspreading help? |
Strict lockdowns were a blunt tool for halting the spread of coronavirus. | Strict lockdowns were a blunt tool for halting the spread of coronavirus. |
But as infections decrease, and the world opens up, scientists say a more targeted approach is needed, | But as infections decrease, and the world opens up, scientists say a more targeted approach is needed, |
Dr Cevik says: "We need to understand the transmission dynamics so we can concentrate our contact-tracing focus. | Dr Cevik says: "We need to understand the transmission dynamics so we can concentrate our contact-tracing focus. |
"But if we can avoid these superspreading events, and the environments and activities associated with them, you can decrease almost 80% of infections. | "But if we can avoid these superspreading events, and the environments and activities associated with them, you can decrease almost 80% of infections. |
"And that's huge." | "And that's huge." |
Follow Rebecca on Twitter | Follow Rebecca on Twitter |