It's Easter time, when my thoughts turn to chocolate bunnies. Not only do they taste better than real bunnies (well, to think of it, I may have never tested a real bunny), but I have been unable to find any reports of tularemia transmitted from chocolate bunnies.
Although we are clearly beyond the peak of winter respiratory infection season, we still have plenty to think about from last week.
Covid Household Transmission From Asymptomatic Children
A prospective study showed a high secondary attack rate (SAR) for covid in households likely stemming from asymptomatically infected children. The study was well designed to try to answer this question, identifying asymptomatic children in Canada and the US who were tested for SARS-CoV-2 for either non-household contact with a known covid case or as part of routine hospital screening. The study covered a 15-month period, and results were analyzed according to viral variants predominating in the community at those times: 1/31/21 - 6/30/21 was predominantly alpha or mixed variants, 7/121 - 12/19/21 was delta, and 12/21/21 - 4/22/22 was omicron. The authors compared household SAR of SARS-CoV-2 positive children to rates of those who tested negative. There are many nuances to the study, but here's the bottom line:
SARs were higher with younger index cases (< 5yo versus 13 - <18 yo), if the index case eventually developed covid symptoms (versus continuing asymptomatic), and during delta and omicron time periods versus the interval when alpha/other variants predominated. If you have access to the full text of the article, skim the Methods section to get an idea of the tremendous amount of effort involved in collecting this kind of data.
Dengue in Puerto Rico
This past week Puerto Rico health authorities declared a public health emergency due to dengue, the first time this has happened in the territory since 2012. What I'm sure is alarming to those authorities, beyond the sheer number of cases (524) in 2024 so far, is that this isn't peak dengue season. As befitting the mosquito vector, cases tend to rise in the summer when it is wetter. See below, with my apologies for lack of English translation. You can click on the Week 10 report in the PR DOH Arboviral Diseases Weekly Report for the full document.
In other words, the worst may be yet to come. (The dashed red line is the epidemic threshold which is higher in summer/early fall weeks; August usually is the peak month for rain in Puerto Rico.) We can certainly expect cases in the mainland US, including in non-travelers living in Florida and other states that have experienced autochthonous dengue cases in the past.
Meningococcal Group Y Alert
CDC issued another HAN report about increasing cases of invasive meningococcal disease due to group Y, a phenomenon that has been noticed for a couple years now.
Note that the incidence rate is very low; this represents a relatively small number of cases but still quite significant given the severity of meningococcal disease. Now is a good time for frontline healthcare providers to read up about meningococcal disease in general including indications for vaccination and identification of high risk groups, especially for this outbreak: age 30-60 years, Black or African-American descent, and living with HIV; as well as the usual risk factors of close contact with a case, people at the age extremes, certain immunodeficiency diseases such as complement deficiencies, and some college settings. The HAN notice includes many useful links.
How's Your Ventilation?
CDC issued revised guidelines for indoor ventilation to help prevent respiratory virus transmission, including SARS-CoV-2. Take a look and maybe ask your friendly office landlord how your building stacks up.
Apparently I've missed it for a couple years, but CDC also has an interactive tool to see how changes in ventilation may improve viral particle clearance. I disappeared down that rabbit hole playing with it for about half an hour. Note the disclaimer at the top of the web page about some information needing updates, though I think it mostly concerns the old 6-feet social distancing and other recommendations rather than the tool itself. Here are results from a home with intermittent HVAC operation, uncertain filter rating, and running the HVAC system for 1 hour after a 4-hour period of gathering. Better results can be achieved with continuous HVAC operation (i.e. keep it on continuously during times of high occupancy), high MERV-rated (Minimal Efficiency Reporting Value) filter, use of HEPA (High Efficiency Particulate Air) cleaner, and other factors.
However, before you overhaul your home system or threaten your office landlord, note what this is really saying. The outcomes pertain to effectiveness of particle reduction in the air, which is different from measuring whether it lessens transmission of SARS-CoV-2, influenza, RSV, or other viruses. It makes sense that there would be some correlation, but until someone does a more definitive study comparing systems and actual viral infection rates, we don't really know to what degree ventilation efficiency changes infectious disease outcomes. Compare this with the study of secondary household transmission mentioned at the top today's post - a more difficult study design with results more directly related to clinical outcomes than just a study of airborne particles in a laboratory chamber. And, parenthetically, the household transmission study did not include individual home ventilation as a factor, so even those results are incomplete. This is complicated!
Measles Update
Measles marches on in the US and across the world. US cases continue to grow, now at 97 since January 1, fed in large part recently by outbreaks in Chicago: 21 new cases in the past week just in Chicago alone. Here are the latest US numbers and distribution from CDC:
In Search of Easter Candy
Once again my wife and I have used our granddaughter as an excuse to buy Easter candy. She's a picky eater, now the only chocolate bunny she will touch must be dark chocolate without any added flavorings or other adulterations. I applaud her good taste, but perhaps next year I'll do this shopping more than a few days prior to Easter Sunday. I had no trouble finding a multitude of milk chocolate bunnies, some with various additives including peanut butter, salted and unsalted caramel, marshmallow, and other ingredients that I might have considered inedible if presented separately from chocolate. Plain dark chocolate bunnies apparently are almost extinct, definitely at least a critically endangered species.
I should have kept track of my steps and car odometer for this year's chocolate bunny safari, though I doubt even the thousands of steps I tallied will offset my Easter candy ingestion.