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      Symptomatic and Asymptomatic Transmission of SARS-CoV-2 in K-12 Schools, British Columbia, Canada April to June 2021

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          ABSTRACT

          We prospectively studied SARS-CoV-2 transmission at schools in an era of variants of concern, offering all close contacts serial viral asymptomatic testing up to 14 days. From the 69 primary cases detected in schools, 392 close contacts were identified and offered asymptomatic testing. A total of 229 (58%) were close school contacts, and of these, 3 tested positive (1.3%), 2 of which were detected through asymptomatic testing. This is in contrast to the 117 household contacts, where 43 (37%) went on to become secondary cases. Routine asymptomatic testing of close contacts should be examined in the context of local testing rates, preventive measures, programmatic costs, and health impacts of asymptomatic transmission.

          IMPORTANCE There is concern that schools may be a setting where asymptomatic infections might result in significant “silent” transmission of SARS-CoV-2, particularly after the emergence of more transmissible variants of concern. After the programmatic implementation of a strategy of asymptomatic testing of close COVID-19 contacts as part of contact tracing in the school setting, the majority of the secondary cases were still found to have occurred in home or social contacts. However, for the 6.2% of secondary cases that occurred in close school contacts, the majority were detected through asymptomatic testing. The potential added yield of this approach needs to be considered within the overall setting, including consideration of the local epidemiology, ongoing goals of case and contact management, additional costs, logistical challenges for families, and possible health impacts of asymptomatic transmission.

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          SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19): What do we know about children? A systematic review

          Abstract BACKGROUND Few paediatric cases of COVID-19 have been reported and we know little about the epidemiology in children, though more is known about other coronaviruses. We aimed to understand the infection rate, clinical presentation, clinical outcomes and transmission dynamics for SARS-CoV-2, in order to inform clinical and public health measures. METHODS We undertook a rapid systematic review and narrative synthesis of all literature relating to SARS-CoV-2 in paediatric populations. The search terms also included SARS-CoV and MERS-CoV. We searched three databases and the COVID-19 resource centres of eleven major journals and publishers. English abstracts of Chinese language papers were included. Data were extracted and narrative syntheses conducted. RESULTS 24 studies relating to COVID-19 were included in the review. Children appear to be less affected by COVID-19 than adults by observed rate of cases in large epidemiological studies. Limited data on attack rate indicate that children are just as susceptible to infection. Data on clinical outcomes are scarce but include several reports of asymptomatic infection and a milder course of disease in young children, though radiological abnormalities are noted. Severe cases are not reported in detail and there are little data relating to transmission. CONCLUSIONS Children appear to have a low observed case rate of COVID-19 but may have similar rates to adults of infection with SARS-CoV-2. This discrepancy may be because children are asymptomatic or too mildly infected to draw medical attention, be tested and counted in observed cases of COVID-19.
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            SCHOOLS CLOSURES DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC: A Catastrophic Global Situation

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              Low SARS-CoV-2 Transmission in Elementary Schools — Salt Lake County, Utah, December 3, 2020–January 31, 2021

              School closures affected more than 55 million students across the United States when implemented as a strategy to prevent the transmission of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19 ( 1 ). Reopening schools requires balancing the risks for SARS-CoV-2 infection to students and staff members against the benefits of in-person learning ( 2 ). During December 3, 2020–January 31, 2021, CDC investigated SARS-CoV-2 transmission in 20 elementary schools (kindergarten through grade 6) that had reopened in Salt Lake County, Utah. The 7-day cumulative number of new COVID-19 cases in Salt Lake County during this time ranged from 290 to 670 cases per 100,000 persons. † Susceptible § school contacts ¶ (students and staff members exposed to SARS-CoV-2 in school) of 51 index patients** (40 students and 11 staff members) were offered SARS-CoV-2 reverse transcription–polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) testing. Among 1,041 susceptible school contacts, 735 (70.6%) were tested, and five of 12 cases identified were classified as school-associated; the secondary attack rate among tested susceptible school contacts was 0.7%. Mask use among students was high (86%), and the median distance between students’ seats in classrooms was 3 ft. Despite high community incidence and an inability to maintain ≥6 ft of distance between students at all times, SARS-CoV-2 transmission was low in these elementary schools. The results from this investigation add to the increasing evidence that in-person learning can be achieved with minimal SARS-CoV-2 transmission risk when multiple measures to prevent transmission are implemented ( 3 , 4 ). On August 24, 2020, a school district in Salt Lake County, Utah, reopened schools for in-person learning. †† Elementary schools restricted school-related extracurricular activities and large group gatherings, placed students in cohorts by classroom, and implemented other COVID-19 strategies to limit spread. §§ During December 3, 2020–January 31, 2021, CDC was invited by the Utah Department of Health to investigate SARS-CoV-2 transmission in a convenience sample of 20 elementary schools in partnership with the school district, the University of Utah’s Health and Economic Recovery Outreach (HERO) Project, ¶¶ Utah Department of Health, and Salt Lake County Health Department. School contacts of identified index patients completed a questionnaire about symptoms and exposures and received SARS-CoV-2 testing. Written consent was provided by participants (or by a parent or guardian for minors). Persons not susceptible to SARS-CoV-2 infection were excluded. Saliva samples (or nasal swabs if saliva was unobtainable) were collected for SARS-CoV-2 RT-PCR testing 5–10 days postexposure; turnaround time for results was typically 1–2 days. Household members of school contacts with a positive SARS-CoV-2 test result were interviewed and offered SARS-CoV-2 RT-PCR testing. The Utah Public Health Laboratory performed whole genome sequencing (WGS) for available positive specimens. A school contact who received a positive test result was considered not to have a school-associated case of COVID-19 when one of the following occurred: 1) illness onset preceded the first date of school exposure, 2) a household member had illness onset during the 14 days preceding the school contact’s illness onset (for symptomatic school contacts) or before the last date of school exposure (for asymptomatic school contacts), or 3) WGS demonstrated that the lineage of the index patient’s isolate differed from that of the school contact.*** To understand school mitigation measures and classroom characteristics, principals and teachers of each index patient were surveyed. Classroom seat distances between students and between the teacher and nearest student were measured. SAS (version 9.4; SAS Institute) was used for descriptive statistics. This activity was reviewed by CDC and was conducted consistent with applicable federal law and CDC policy. ††† The 20 elementary schools included 1,214 staff members and 10,171 students, 81% of whom attended school in person and 56% of whom were eligible for free or reduced-price meal programs. Among the student population, 53% were non-Hispanic White persons, 31% were Hispanic or Latino persons, 5% were Asian persons, 5% were Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander persons, and 4% were Black or African American persons. Fifty-one index patients (40 students, median age = 9.5 years [range = 5–12 years] and 11 staff members, median age = 50 years [range = 26–62 years]) were identified from 48 classrooms (Table 1). These index patients were infectious at school for a median of 2 days (range = 1–4 days), and 16 (31%) were asymptomatic. A total of 1,083 school contacts (943 students and 140 staff members) were identified; 42 (4%) were not susceptible to SARS-CoV-2 infection. §§§ Among the 1,041 susceptible school contacts (student median age = 9 years [range = 5–18 years]; staff member median age = 39.5 years [range = 19–83 years]), 144 (14%) were quarantined (Table 2). Among the 735 (71%) tested school contacts (participation range = 44%–100% across schools), testing was completed a median of 8 days after the school exposure (range = 6–15 days). Overall, 103 of 133 (77%) staff member contacts and 632 of 908 (70%) student contacts were tested; among 303 Hispanic or Latino contacts and 566 non-Hispanic White contacts, 237 (78%) and 382 (67%) respectively, were tested. TABLE 1 Characteristics of index and school-associated patients with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 in 20 elementary schools — Salt Lake County, Utah, December 3, 2020–January 31, 2021 Characteristic No. (%) of persons with COVID-19 Index (n = 51)* School-associated (n = 5)† Cases per school, median (range) 2 (1–9) 0 (0–2) School contacts, median (range) 20 (5–53) — § Close contacts, median (range) 6 (0–23) — Other school contacts, median (range) 13 (0–52) — Median age, yrs (range) Students (index: n = 40; school-associated: n = 4) 9.5 (5–12) 10.5 (10–12) Staff members (index: n = 11; school-associated: n = 1) 50 (26–62) 43 (43–43) Sex Male 24 (47.1) 2 (40.0) Female 27 (52.9) 3 (60.0) Race/Ethnicity White, non-Hispanic 30 (58.8) 1 (20.0) Hispanic/Latino 15 (29.4) 2 (40.0) Black/African American 1 (2.0) 0 (0.0) Asian 1 (2.0) 1 (20.0) Native Hawaiian/Other Pacific Islander 2 (3.9) 0 (0.0) American Indian or Alaska Native 0 (0.0) 0 (0.0) Multiracial 2 (3.9) 1 (20.0) Grade in school¶ Kindergarten 5 (12.5) 0 (0.0) 1 3 (7.5) 0 (0.0) 2 2 (5.0) 0 (0.0) 3 6 (15.0) 0 (0.0) 4 6 (15.0) 2 (50.0) 5 8 (20.0) 0 (0.0) 6 10 (25.0) 2 (50.0) Role in school Students 40 (78.4) 4 (80.0) Head teachers 6 (11.8) 1 (20.0) Paraeducators** 0 (0.0) 0 (0.0) Other teachers†† 4 (7.8) 0 (0.0) Other staff members§ § 1 (2.0) 0 (0.0) Days in school while infectious, median (range) 2 (1–4) 0 (0–2) Symptom status Ever symptomatic 35 (68.6) 2 (40.0) Asymptomatic 16 (31.4) 3 (60.0) One or more underlying medical condition¶¶ 9 (20.9) 0 (0.0) Quarantine status after exposure to index patient*** Under quarantine — 3 (60.0) Notified, close contact — 0 (0.0) Notified, not close contact — 2 (40.0) Abbreviation: IQR= interquartile range. * An index patient was defined as a student or staff member with laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection who had attended in-person school while infectious for at least 1 day. Infectious period was estimated as 2 days before to 10 days after symptom onset (if symptomatic) or first positive specimen collection date (if asymptomatic). † School-associated transmission was excluded if 1) the school contact had an illness onset (if symptomatic, symptom onset, if asymptomatic, first positive test date) before the last date of school exposure, 2) a household member had an illness onset (if symptomatic, symptom onset, if asymptomatic, first positive test date) within 14 days of the positive school contact’s illness onset (if school contact was symptomatic) or before the last date of school exposure (if the school contact was asymptomatic) or 3) whole genome sequencing supported nonschool-associated transmission. § Dashes indicate that data are not applicable. ¶ Restricted to students. For index patients, n = 40, for secondary cases, n = 4. ** Includes teacher aides and interns. †† Includes ethics teachers, instructional coaches, learning support teachers, special education teachers, and substitute teachers. §§ Includes administrators, bus drivers, and health specialists. ¶¶ Missing data: Underlying medical conditions: eight index patients, one school-associated patient. *** Starting January 4, 2021, the school district changed its quarantine policy based on changes to state recommendations, and only students and staff members identified as close contacts (i.e., within 6 ft of the index patient for a cumulative total of ≥15 minutes over a 24-hour period) of the index patient were quarantined when both were maskless; previously, all close contacts would have been quarantined regardless of mask use. Any close contacts identified in January who met the criteria to not quarantine were categorized as “Notified, close contact.” Those who shared a classroom space with the index patient but were not identified as close contacts were categorized as “Notified, not close contact.” TABLE 2 Characteristics of COVID-19–susceptible school contacts* in 20 elementary schools — Salt Lake County, Utah, December 3, 2020–January 31, 2021 Characteristic No. (%) of school contacts Total (N = 1,041) Tested (n = 735) Overall participation — † 735 (70.6) Median percent participation across 20 schools (range) — 69.7 (44.4–100.0) Median age, yrs (range)§ Students (n = 908) 9.0 (5.0–18.0) 9.0 (5.0–18.0) Staff members (n = 112) 39.5 (19.0–83.0) 39.0 (19.0–83.0) Sex Male 487 (47.7) 352 (47.9) Female 535 (52.3) 383 (52.1) Race/Ethnicity White, non-Hispanic 566 (55.9) 382 (52.0) Hispanic/Latino 303 (29.9) 237 (32.2) Black/African American 28 (2.8) 25 (3.4) Asian 33 (3.3) 29 (3.9) Native Hawaiian/Other Pacific Islander 28 (2.8) 15 (2.0) American Indian or Alaska Native 8 (0.8) 7 (1.0) Multiracial 47 (4.6) 40 (5.4) Grade ¶ Kindergarten 110 (12.1) 61 (9.7) 1 107 (11.8) 79 (12.5) 2 139 (15.3) 108 (17.1) 3 113 (12.4) 78 (12.3) 4 134 (14.8) 95 (15.0) 5 118 (13.0) 86 (13.6) 6 182 (20.0) 121 (19.1) ≥7 5 (0.6) 4 (0.6) Role in school Students 908 (87.2) 632 (86.0) Head teachers 77 (7.4) 61 (8.3) Paraeducators** 24 (2.3) 13 (1.8) Other teachers †† 14 (1.3) 12 (1.6) Other staff members§§ 18 (1.7) 17 (2.3) Days between school exposure and test date, median (range) ¶¶ 8 (6–15) 8 (6–15) Quarantine status after exposure to index patient*** Quarantined 144 (13.8) 105 (14.3) Notified, close contact 183 (17.6) 131 (17.8) Notified, not close contact 714 (68.6) 499 (67.9) * School contact was defined as a student or staff member who was in contact with the index patient for a total of ≥15 minutes in a classroom, cafeteria, school bus, or recess space during an index patient’s infectious period. This includes any contacts who received positive SARS-CoV-2 test results but were not determined to have school-associated cases. † Dashes indicate that data are not applicable. § Missing data (also applies to Sex and Race/Ethnicity categories): Age: 21 nonparticipating staff members; Sex: 19 nonparticipating staff members; Race/Ethnicity: 28 nonparticipants. ¶ Restricted to students (n = 908). Students in grade 7 or higher were contacts of an elementary school student on the school bus. All five students in grade 7 or higher were contacts of the same index patient. Bus contacts were not routinely included on the list of school contacts for all 51 index patients. ** Includes teacher aides and interns. †† Includes ethics teachers, instructional coaches, learning support teachers, special education teachers, and substitute teachers. §§ Includes administrators, bus drivers, and health specialists. ¶¶ All classroom testing occurred 6–10 days after exposure. One contact was tested on day 8 and offered a follow-up repeat testing on day 15. *** Starting January 4, 2021, the school district changed its quarantine policy based on changes to state recommendations, and only students and staff members identified as close contacts (i.e., within 6 ft of the index patient for a cumulative total of ≥15 minutes over a 24-hour period) of the index patient were quarantined when both were maskless; previously, all close contacts would have been quarantined regardless of mask use. Any close contacts identified in January who met the criteria to not quarantine were categorized as “Notified, close contact.” Those who shared a classroom space with the index patient but were not identified as close contacts were categorized as “Notified, not close contact.” Among all 735 tested contacts, 12 (1.6%) (11 students, one teacher) had a positive SARS-CoV-2 test result, seven of whom were determined not to have school-associated cases because of epidemiologic evidence (four) or because WGS suggested community acquisition based on lineage differences (three) (Supplementary Figure, https://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/104112). WGS was only available for three pairs of index patients and their associated contacts (Table 3). After exclusion, five cases from five separate classrooms were classified as school-associated, for a secondary attack rate of 0.7% (five of 728). No outbreaks were detected. ¶¶¶ Three of five persons with school-associated cases had been quarantined (the secondary attack rate among quarantined persons who were tested was 3.0% [three of 101]); the remaining two persons with school-associated cases had not been quarantined and were isolated only after a positive test result (secondary attack rate among nonquarantined contacts who were tested = 0.3% [two of 627]).**** Among the five persons with school-associated cases, three persons were asymptomatic, and three persons were exposed to asymptomatic index patients; four cases were attributed to student-to-student transmission, and one was attributed to student-to-teacher transmission. Four of the five school-associated transmission events occurred because the contact sat <6 ft from the index patient during class (two) or during lunch (two), or the index patient or contact had poor mask use (two) or physical distancing behavior (two) (Table 3). All five households of persons with school-associated cases were tested. Tertiary transmission was detected in three households; within those households, six of eight household members received positive SARS-CoV-2 test results. TABLE 3 Characteristics of 12 contacts who received positive SARS-CoV-2 test results and summary of evidence for school-associated transmission in five contacts across 20 elementary schools — Salt Lake County, Utah, December 3, 2020–January 31, 2021* Positive contact ID Index patient School contact† School-associated transmission Factors associated with transmission School role Symptoms reported School role Symptoms reported Basis for exclusion of school-associated transmission School-associated transmission hypothesized Close contact between patient and contact† Contact sat <6 ft from index patient Poor adherence to distancing, mask use, or neither at school Epidemiologic data WGS data Index patient Contact I1 Student N Student N N NA Y Y Class Distancing Mask use, distancing J2 Student N Student Y N NA Y Y Class Neither Mask use X3 Student Y Student N N NA Y N Lunch Neither Distancing AA4 Student Y Student N N NA Y Y Lunch Neither Neither EE5 Student N Teacher Y N NA Y N Neither Neither Neither A6 Student Y Student Y N Y N Y —§ — — A7 Student Y Student N N Y N Y — — — L8 Student N Student Y N Y N Y — — — O9 Teacher N Student Y Y NA N Y — — — T10 Student Y Student Y Y NA N Y — — — RR11 Teacher Y Student Y Y NA N Y — — — VV12 Student Y Student Y Y NA N Y — — — Abbreviations: ID = identifier; Y = yes; N = no; NA = not available; WGS = whole genome sequencing. * School-associated transmission was excluded by epidemiologic data if 1) the school contact had an illness onset (if symptomatic, symptom onset; if asymptomatic, first positive test date) before the last date of school exposure, or 2) a household member had an illness onset (if symptomatic, symptom onset; if asymptomatic, first positive test date) within 14 days of the positive school contact’s illness onset (if school contact was symptomatic) or before the last date of school exposure (if the school contact was asymptomatic). School-associated transmission was excluded by WGS data if the index patient isolate was found to be a different lineage from the positive school contact isolate. † Persons were determined to be close contacts if they were <6 ft from the index patient for a cumulative total of ≥15 minutes during a 24-hour period at school. All other school contacts were students or staff members who were in contact with the index patient for a cumulative total of ≥15 minutes in a classroom, cafeteria, school bus, or recess space during an index patient’s infectious period. § Dashes indicate that data are not applicable. On December 17, 2020, Utah modified its quarantine recommendations for school contacts (students or staff members) who were identified as close contacts (persons within 6 ft of the index patient for a cumulative total of ≥15 minutes during a 24-hour period). Previously, school contacts who were close contacts were quarantined †††† regardless of mask use; afterwards, they were only quarantined when the index patient or the contact did not wear a mask during the interaction. The school district implemented this recommendation on January 4, 2021, after a holiday break, and 158 students who were close contacts continued attending in-person school. Among these 158 students, 111 (70%) were tested; no school-associated cases were detected. Students in 42 classrooms §§§§ (median class size = 22 students [range = 3–33 students]) sat a median of 3 ft (range = 1–5 ft) apart within the classroom, with a median of eight students (range = 1–16 students) sitting within a radius of 6 ft (Supplementary Table 1, https://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/104112). Among 37 teachers with available data, 23 (62%) were seated ≥6 ft from the closest student (median = 6 ft, range = 2–10 ft), but all teachers reported daily one-on-one or small group instruction in close proximity to students, almost always without using plexiglass or physical barriers. Among 42 teachers, 36 (86%) reported that students always wore masks indoors except when eating or drinking. Nineteen of 20 (95%) principals reported using staggered mealtimes to increase spacing between students during lunch in the cafeteria (although still <6 ft apart). All schools reported implementing multiple measures to decrease in-school SARS-CoV-2 transmission (Supplementary Table 2, https://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/104112). Discussion Despite high community incidence and an inability to space students’ classroom seats ≥6 ft apart, this investigation found low SARS-CoV-2 transmission and no school-related outbreaks in 20 Salt Lake County elementary schools with high student mask use and implementation of multiple strategies to limit transmission. Other U.S. studies have also detected minimal school-associated transmission when implementing strict mitigation measures, although testing was limited to symptomatic close contacts ( 3 , 4 ). Because children with COVID-19 are frequently asymptomatic ( 5 ), the expanded testing to all school contacts regardless of symptom status in this investigation strengthens the evidence for low elementary school transmission. In addition to implementation of multiple strategies to reduce in-school transmission, school-related activities that increase the risk for SARS-CoV-2 transmission, such as school-based team sports ( 6 ), were suspended. Although most teachers were seated ≥6 ft from students, CDC’s recommendation at the time of the study of ≥6 ft student distancing within the classroom ( 7 ) was not possible because of limited space. A recent study in Massachusetts found no difference in student and staff member case rates from school districts with ≥3 feet physical distancing requirements compared with school districts with ≥6 feet physical distancing requirements ( 8 ). The study detected no teacher-driven transmission; other school investigations have identified teachers and staff members as being central to in-school transmission ¶¶¶¶ ( 9 , 10 ). Although school-associated transmission was rare in this investigation, most cases did lead to household transmission, highlighting the importance of reducing school transmission to prevent infected children from transmitting SARS-CoV-2 to household members. The modified quarantine policy, allowing contacts to continue attending in-person school if both the index patient and the contact were wearing a mask, did not lead to additional school-associated transmission and resulted in over 1,200 student in-person learning days saved.***** Among the five school-associated cases, the contact or index patient often had poor mask compliance, or they sat near one another during lunch. Findings suggest that quarantine determinations based on mask use of the index patient and close contacts might be adequate for preventing additional school-associated transmission in schools implementing multiple critical prevention strategies. The findings in this report are subject to at least four limitations. First, WGS to differentiate school-associated from community transmission in a high incidence setting was not always available. Second, some infected contacts might have been missed because not all contacts received testing and the winter break mid-investigation might have interrupted additional school-associated transmission. Third, misclassification of susceptibility might have occurred as immunity status was unknown. Finally, these findings are specific to the current circulating SARS-CoV-2 variant distribution; as variant distribution shifts to new variants, more transmission might occur. In an urban county with high SARS-CoV-2 community incidence, comprehensive testing of contacts detected low school-associated transmission in elementary schools, with a secondary attack rate of 0.7%. These results suggest that when ≥6 ft distancing is not feasible, schools in high-incidence communities can still limit in-school transmission by consistently using masks and implementing other important mitigation strategies. Summary What is already known about this topic? Data suggest that school-associated SARS-CoV-2 transmission is low. What is added by this report? SARS-CoV-2 testing was offered to 1,041 school contacts of 51 index patients across 20 elementary schools in Salt Lake County, Utah. In a high community transmission setting, low school-associated transmission was observed with a 0.7% secondary attack rate. Mask adherence was high, but students’ classroom seats were <6 ft apart and a median of 3 ft apart. What are the implications for public health practice? These findings add to evidence that in-person elementary schools can be opened safely with minimal in-school transmission when critical prevention strategies including mask use are implemented, even though maintaining ≥6 ft between students’ seats might not be possible.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Editor
                Journal
                Microbiol Spectr
                Microbiol Spectr
                spectrum
                Microbiology Spectrum
                American Society for Microbiology (1752 N St., N.W., Washington, DC )
                2165-0497
                6 July 2022
                Jul-Aug 2022
                6 July 2022
                : 10
                : 4
                : e00622-22
                Affiliations
                [a ] Vancouver Coastal Health, Office of the Chief Medical Health Officer, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
                [b ] BC Children’s Hospital Research Institute, University of British Columbiagrid.17091.3e, , Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
                [c ] School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbiagrid.17091.3e, , Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
                [d ] Department of Mathematics and Institute of Applied Mathematics, University of British Columbiagrid.17091.3e, , Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
                [e ] Experimental Medicine Program, Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbiagrid.17091.3e, , Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
                [f ] Public Health Surveillance Unit, Vancouver Coastal Health, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
                [g ] Department of Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbiagrid.17091.3e, , Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
                [h ] British Columbia Centre for Disease Control, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
                [i ] Vancouver School District, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
                [j ] BC Children’s and Women’s Health Centre, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
                [k ] Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of British Columbiagrid.17091.3e, , Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
                Johns Hopkins Hospital
                Author notes

                The authors declare a conflict of interest. C.O’R. is an employee of the Vancouver School District, but the District was not involved in the design, analysis, interpretation of the data or the drafting of this manuscript. Rest of the authors declare no conflict of interest.

                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8038-6278
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0835-9504
                Article
                00622-22 spectrum.00622-22
                10.1128/spectrum.00622-22
                9430687
                35862938
                4942f128-0275-4b98-ac16-18775f1e51ea
                Copyright © 2022 Choi et al.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.

                History
                : 8 March 2022
                : 13 June 2022
                Page count
                supplementary-material: 0, Figures: 2, Tables: 2, Equations: 0, References: 12, Pages: 6, Words: 3242
                Funding
                Funded by: Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC), FundRef https://doi.org/10.13039/100011094;
                Award ID: HQ-000130
                Award Recipient : Collette O’Reilly
                Categories
                Research Article
                epidemiology, Epidemiology
                Custom metadata
                July/August 2022

                covid-19,sars-cov-2,school,transmission,asymptomatic
                covid-19, sars-cov-2, school, transmission, asymptomatic

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