Are you a super-spreader?
Medical experts indicate approximately 80 percent of infections are spread by just 20 percent of infected people–super-spreaders–in a phenomenon known simply as the 80/20 rule.…
Medical experts indicate approximately 80 percent of infections are spread by just 20 percent of infected people–super-spreaders–in a phenomenon known simply as the 80/20 rule.
This interesting fact about disease spread is true not only in the human kingdom, but the animal kingdom as well, and has been documented worldwide during outbreaks of tuberculosis, measles, cholera, and Ebola viral haemorrhagic fever.
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In August of last year, a study published in the journal PLoS One used birds as the species in which to study the 80/20 rule; the findings were as expected. For a number of speculated reasons, some birds were what researchers called “supershedders,” animals that were more likely to pass on infections to other birds they came in contact with.
The reasons for this, stated researchers in the study, most likely had to do with the host animal’s natural response to a virus, overall health, access to food, and social status, though there was no clear-cut reason for why some birds were more infectious compared to others.
Now, experts say the same information on super-spreaders can be applied to humans, and it appears that the super-spreaders among the population are not necessarily the outwardly sickest individuals. Research suggests that super-spreaders appear fairly healthy, and it all has to do with how their immune system handles an infection.
Why some people are super-spreaders
An individual’s infection status often depends on how healthy that individual is at the time of infection and how frequently that person comes in contact with others. Daycare centers, hospitals and office settings, for example, are prime places for high rates of infection. But super-spreaders are hazardous wherever they might be. According to research presented by the National Academy of Sciences, a super-spreader likely becomes so due to how the immune system reacts when a pathogen enters the body.