Asymptomatic or someone who is not showing any symptoms appears to be less likely, to spread COVID-19 said WHO.
Asymptomatic or someone who is not showing any symptoms appears to be less likely,l to spread COVID-19 said WHO. The study acquires special importance as India enters the second week of Unlock1.0, with restaurants, religious places, malls opening up, added to a vast population straying out for morning and evening walks.
‘COVID-19: It still seems to be rare that an asymptomatic person actually transmits onward to a secondary individual.’
According to the WHO’s report, "Comprehensive studies on transmission from asymptomatic individuals are difficult to conduct, but the available evidence from contact tracing reported by Member States suggests that asymptomatically-infected individuals are much less likely to transmit the virus than those who develop symptoms." Maria Van Kerkhove, the World Health Organization’s technical lead for Covid-19 response in a tweet said "In these data, it is important to breakdown truly asymptomatic vs pre-symptomatic vs mildly symptomatic.
"Also to note that the per cent reported or estimated to be "asymptomatic" is not the same as the per cent that are asymptomatic that actually transmits."
The WHO said among the available published studies, some have described occurrences of transmission from people who did not have symptoms. For example, among 63 asymptomatically-infected individuals studied in China, there was evidence that 9 (14 per cent) infected another person. Furthermore, among two studies which carefully investigated secondary transmission from cases to contacts, one found no secondary transmission among 91 contacts of 9 asymptomatic cases, while the other reported that 6.4 per cent of cases were attributable to pre-symptomatic transmission.
"The available data, to date, on onward infection from cases without symptoms comes from a limited number of studies with small samples that are subject to possible recall bias and for which fomite transmission cannot be ruled out," said the WHO.
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Van Kerkhove in a media briefing reportedly said that from the data examined by WHO, it still seems to be rare that an asymptomatic person actually transmits onward to a secondary individual.
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Source-IANS