Intrafamilial transmission and clustering of COVID-19: a socioepidemiological perspective

Authors

  • Hiram J Jaramillo-Ramírez Internal Medicine Department, Mexicali's General Hospital, Mexicali, Mexico
  • Beatriz H Kushida-Contreras Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Department, Mexico's General Hospital, Mexico City, Mexico https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3027-3707
  • Aranza E García-Aréstegui Internal Medicine Department, Mexicali's General Hospital, Autonomous University of Baja California, Faculty of Medicine, Mexicali, Mexico
  • Gisel V Licón-Martínez Internal Medicine Department, Mexicali's General Hospital, Autonomous University of Baja California, Faculty of Medicine, Mexicali, Mexico
  • Miguel A Gaxiola-García Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Department, Mexico's Children’s Hospital, Mexico City, Mexico

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3855/jidc.16149

Keywords:

Coronavirus, epidemiology, pandemics, COVID-19

Abstract

Introduction: The dynamics of COVID-19 transmission occurring in familial clusters may be related to sociodemographic and epidemiological characteristics of cases and contacts. The aim of this study was to identify the dynamics of COVID-19 transmission in families with more than one documented case.

Methodology: Data of about 58 familiar clusters of COVID-19 was gathered and followed up clinically and by telephonic interview. Age, gender, social security plan, comorbidities, occupation, incubation, and symptoms were analyzed using Students’ t-test and Chi squared test.

Results: The contacts were younger and healthier than cases, and students were predominant (28%). Among the symptomatic contacts, reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction yielded a positive rate of 69%. There were 2.93 contacts per case. Families with clustered cases had more family members when compared to families without clustered cases (4.2 vs. 3.3; p = 0.022). Mean age of contacts in families with clustered cases compared to families without clustered cases also showed differences (29.5 vs. 35.7; p = 0.047).

Conclusions: Characterization of cases and contacts amidst a pandemic is essential for the effective implementation of health policies and research perspectives.

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Published

2022-06-30

How to Cite

1.
Jaramillo-Ramírez HJ, Kushida-Contreras BH, García-Aréstegui AE, Licón-Martínez GV, Gaxiola-García MA (2022) Intrafamilial transmission and clustering of COVID-19: a socioepidemiological perspective. J Infect Dev Ctries 16:937–943. doi: 10.3855/jidc.16149

Issue

Section

Coronavirus Pandemic