The generation gap: age and COVID-19 risk
25 August 2020
Many frazzled parents who鈥檝e been juggling work and home schooling during the COVID-19 lockdown have been anxious to know when schools might fully re-open. The UK government has said that all children will return to school in September. But how safe is it for them to do so?聽
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A recent study of COVID-19 cases from six countries suggests that children and those under 20 are half as likely to become infected than older adults. The study was co-authored by Dr Rosalind Eggo from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM), a UKRI-funded Health Data Research UK Fellow.
She explains: 鈥淲e had seen that right from the very earliest phase of the epidemic in Wuhan there were very few reports of children being infected.聽
鈥淲e wanted to understand if this was because the children are getting infected but they鈥檙e not getting ill, and so that鈥檚 why they鈥檙e not getting reported 鈥 or are they not getting it in the first place?鈥
In search of answers, the research team, led by LSHTM鈥檚 , collated publicly available data on cases of COVID-19, provided in scientific research papers or websites. The data included patients鈥 ages and clinical symptoms but were not linked to any information that could identify the people involved.
The team developed a mathematical model of how the virus could be passed from person to person, which could be sliced and diced by age group. They fitted the model to the data they had collated, which mainly came from the first countries to be affected by the outbreak: China, South Korea, Singapore, Canada, Japan and Italy.
To visualise how people of different ages in the gathered data were mixing with one another, the researchers created something known in the epidemiology world as a 鈥榗ontacts matrix鈥.聽
Rosalind explains, 鈥淎long the bottom of the matrix you have the age of the contacts and going up the side you have the age of the people that they鈥檙e mixing with. Then the entries in that square tell you the intensity of contacts between each age. So if, for example, you close schools, then the number of contacts between children will go down.鈥
A typical contact matrix – from ,
When the researchers looked at the timings of measures to control the virus鈥檚 spread, such as school closures or lockdown, and checked them against their matrix they found that children appeared to be about half as susceptible to picking up the infection as adults.聽
鈥淭hat has really big implications for how we can try and control the epidemic,鈥 Rosalind says. 鈥淪o if children aren鈥檛 getting infected then interventions aimed at them such as the closure of schools wouldn鈥檛 have such a big effect.鈥
What鈥檚 more, the study showed that younger people were less likely than the older adults to show the clinical symptoms of the infection 鈥 such as fever and dry cough. Around two in ten 10 to 20 year olds in the study showed clinical symptoms, compared with around seven in every ten 70 year olds.
The team has since carried out a review of data from more than 6,000 international studies of COVID-19 鈥 the largest analysis of its kind 鈥撀 to further understand infection and transmission of the virus in children.聽
Its findings backed up those from their earlier study, showing that children and young people had 56% lower odds of catching COVID-19 from an infected person compared with people aged over 20.
But there are still many unknowns. As yet, we don鈥檛 know why children seem to be less susceptible to the infection.聽
Rosalind adds, 鈥淭he major problem with answering these questions is that there are very limited data available. A lot of the studies in our larger analysis come from China, which is because they had the early epidemic and a lot of good epidemiological investigation happened there.聽
鈥淏ut if we are looking for a biological mechanism or effect, if all of your studies come from only one place you don鈥檛 know if it鈥檚 going to hold up everywhere. So we need more data to really understand what鈥檚 going on, from a range of different countries and locations.鈥
Children returning to school in September in the UK and elsewhere could present an opportunity to gather more useful data about the risks of COVID-19 transmission in schools, families and the wider community.
鈥淎ll the data in the study came from countries where schools had already closed,鈥 Rosalind explains. 鈥淚f we could use data from places where schools didn鈥檛 close, or have re-opened, then that would also help us understand a bit better the role of children in transmission.鈥
Health Data Research UK is working to make health data securely and safely accessible for research to improve people鈥檚 lives. Find out more at www.hdruk.ac.uk, and follow on Twitter and .
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