Emerging Infectious Diseases (Apr 2024)

Bus Riding as Amplification Mechanism for SARS-CoV-2 Transmission, Germany, 2021

  • Meike Schöll,
  • Christoph Höhn,
  • Johannes Boucsein,
  • Felix Moek,
  • Jasper Plath,
  • Maria an der Heiden,
  • Matthew Huska,
  • Stefan Kröger,
  • Sofia Paraskevopoulou,
  • Claudia Siffczyk,
  • Udo Buchholz,
  • Raskit Lachmann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid3004.231299
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 4
pp. 711 – 720

Abstract

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To examine the risk associated with bus riding and identify transmission chains, we investigated a COVID-19 outbreak in Germany in 2021 that involved index case-patients among bus-riding students. We used routine surveillance data, performed laboratory analyses, interviewed case-patients, and conducted a cohort study. We identified 191 case-patients, 65 (34%) of whom were elementary schoolchildren. A phylogenetically unique strain and epidemiologic analyses provided a link between air travelers and cases among bus company staff, schoolchildren, other bus passengers, and their respective household members. The attack rate among bus-riding children at 1 school was ≈4 times higher than among children not taking a bus to that school. The outbreak exemplifies how an airborne agent may be transmitted effectively through (multiple) short (<20 minutes) public transport journeys and may rapidly affect many persons.

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