Duke Clinical Research Institute.
Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina.
Pediatrics. 2022 Feb 1;149(12 Suppl 2). doi: 10.1542/peds.2021-054268L.
With layered mitigation strategies, there are low rates of secondary transmission of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2; therefore, quarantine after close-contact exposure to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 in the kindergarten through 12th grade (K-12) setting further disrupts in-person learning with uncertain benefit. We explored the impact of eliminating quarantine for students with mask-on-mask exposures to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) on associated secondary transmission in schools.
This observational study was conducted in a large K-12 public school district in Omaha, Nebraska (August 1, 2020, to March 15, 2021). We assessed primary and secondary COVID-19 infections in teachers and staff, frequency of quarantine for students and staff, and the impact of eliminating quarantine on secondary transmission in mask-on-mask exposure settings.
A total of 18 632 and 19 604 students and 2855 staff attended in-person learning in the fall and spring semesters, respectively; 1856 primary infections were among students and staff. Despite 3947 student quarantines in the fall and 1689 student quarantines in the first 10 weeks of spring semester instruction, there were only 2 cases of secondary transmission. A local policy change removed quarantine requirements for students with mask-on-mask exposure to COVID-19. Required quarantines in the spring semester reduced by 41% per primary infection compared with the fall; no student who qualified to avoid quarantine developed a secondary infection.
School-based COVID-19 transmission was exceptionally low in this large K-12 Nebraska school district. Elimination of student quarantine after masked exposure to COVID-19 within school was not associated with secondary transmission. Elimination of unnecessary quarantine elimination may help maximize in-person learning in the 2021-2022 school year.
通过分层缓解策略,严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒 2(SARS-CoV-2)的二次传播率较低;因此,幼儿园至 12 年级(K-12)环境中因密切接触 SARS-CoV-2 而进行的隔离进一步扰乱了面对面学习,且收益不确定。我们探讨了在学校取消对戴口罩暴露于 2019 年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)的学生进行隔离对相关二次传播的影响。
本观察性研究在位于内布拉斯加州奥马哈市的一个大型 K-12 公立学区进行(2020 年 8 月 1 日至 2021 年 3 月 15 日)。我们评估了教师和工作人员的原发性和继发性 COVID-19 感染、学生和工作人员的隔离频率,以及取消戴口罩暴露环境中的隔离对二次传播的影响。
秋季和春季学期分别有 18632 名和 19604 名学生和 2855 名工作人员参加面对面学习;学生和工作人员中有 1856 例原发性感染。尽管秋季有 3947 名学生被隔离,春季学期头 10 周有 1689 名学生被隔离,但仅有 2 例二次传播。当地政策的改变取消了 COVID-19 戴口罩暴露学生的隔离要求。与秋季相比,春季学期每例原发性感染所需的隔离减少了 41%;没有符合条件而无需隔离的学生发生二次感染。
在这个大型内布拉斯加州 K-12 学区,基于学校的 COVID-19 传播率极低。在学校内戴口罩暴露于 COVID-19 后取消学生隔离与二次传播无关。消除不必要的隔离可能有助于在 2021-2022 学年最大限度地实现面对面学习。