The worldwide infections
reached a new milestone of over 200,000 on Wednesday, with 8,312 deaths.
Cases of the new
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) that fly under the radar — without being
detected or diagnosed — may have fuelled its rapid spread, a new study just
published said.
The new study found that
people with COVID-19 who didn’t get diagnosed, likely because they didn’t feel
very sick, were the source of at least two-thirds of documented COVID-19 cases
in China in the early days of the outbreak.
“The explosion of COVID-19
cases in China was largely driven by individuals with mild, limited, or no
symptoms who went undetected,” study co-author Jeffrey Shaman, a professor of
environmental health sciences at Columbia University Mailman School of Public
Health, said in a statement.
“Undetected cases can
expose a far greater portion of the population to [the] virus than would
otherwise occur. … These ‘stealth transmissions’ will continue to present a
major challenge to the containment of this outbreak going forward,” Shaman
said.
For the study, published
Monday (March 16) in the journal Science, the researchers developed a computer
model to simulate the spread of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19,
among 375 cities in China, including Wuhan, where the outbreak began. For the
model, they combined data on reported infections with information on people’s
movements (obtained from mobile phone data).
They estimated that, prior
to the lockdown of Wuhan on Jan. 23, about 86% of all COVID-19 infections in
China were undetected. In other words, for every confirmed case of COVID-19,
there were six undetected cases, according to The Washington Post. These
undetected cases were responsible for the majority of the disease spread prior
to the lockdown, the researchers said.
The findings have
implications for COVID-19 spread in the rest of the world, as many countries
are behind on testing for the disease. The results suggest that the number of
cases worldwide could be five to 10 times higher than what has been reported,
meaning the true number of cases could be higher than 1.5 million, according to
Quartz.
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