Study: Super-Spreaders Are Contributing To 'Explosions' Of COVID-19 Transmission

Study: Super-Spreaders Are Contributing To 'Explosions' Of COVID-19 Transmission

A new study highlights the astonishing role played by ‘super-spreaders’ in the novel coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic.
Super-spreading is a phenomenon in which certain individuals disproportionately infect a large number of people.
Several super-spreader events have been recorded across the country since the start of the pandemic.
According to UPI, roughly 20% of all COVID-19 infections in Georgia during the early stages of the outbreak were directly linked with 2% of the cases.
The researchers say the findings indicate that super-spreading of the virus was widespread in the state, particularly in rural areas.
Super-spreading can contribute to explosions of transmission, even when we are seeing the numbers of new cases declining. Asst. Prof. Max Lau Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University

Max Lau,Coronavirus Disease,Zoonoses