| Literature DB >> 33308355 |
Arni S R Srinivasa Rao1,2, Steven G Krantz3, Michael B Bonsall4, Thomas Kurien5, Siddappa N Byrareddy6, David A Swanson7, Ramesh Bhat8, Kurapati Sudhakar9.
Abstract
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33308355 PMCID: PMC8160498 DOI: 10.1017/ice.2020.1376
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol ISSN: 0899-823X Impact factor: 3.254
Fig. 1.Demonstration of average number of secondary infections observed through tracing and diagnosing. In (a), let and be the two primary COVID-19 infected, where the individual had generated 7 secondary infections out of which 5 were traced and diagnosed. The individual had generated 4 secondary infections out of which 2 were traced and diagnosed. The observed arithmetic average secondary infected by in (a) was , but the true average by them was . In (b), the third secondary infection in (a), say, becomes a primary infected that generates 4 secondary infections out of which all were traced and diagnosed. In (b), the second secondary infection in (a), say, becomes a primary infected that generates 7 secondary infections out of which only 5 were traced and diagnosed. Finally, in (b), the fourth secondary infection in (a), say, by primary infected becomes a primary infected that generates 3 secondary infections out of which only 2 were traced and diagnosed. The observed arithmetic average secondary infections by was , but if every COVID-19 patient was diagnosed, then the true average secondary infections by them was . Note that the total traced and tested could be many fold more than the actual positive cases found. Suppose 22 secondary infections generated during the third generation, then the mean number of secondary infections (geometric) obtained during three generations of spread is .