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Lancet Study: COVID-19 Transmission Uncommon Before Symptoms.

The⁣ Truth About Silent Transmission of COVID-19

In a blow to the COVID-19 “silent spreader” narrative that has been used to push for universal‍ masking, including controversially ⁤among​ schoolchildren, a recent study published in The Lancet suggests that ​people who are ⁣non-symptomatic rarely have the ability‌ to⁤ infect ⁣others.

Silent transmission is the idea that those who are infected with COVID-19 but show no symptoms ⁢can still spread ⁢the virus ‌to other people.

While all relevant studies show that presymptomatic​ and asymptomatic “silent spreaders” account for some proportion of infections ‍in other⁣ people, the degree⁤ of silent transmission is‍ less clear.

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A number of early studies—in some cases affected by limitations that ⁤may have led to their‍ proportion of presymptomatic transmission to be “artifactually inflated”—suggested that silent transmission accounted for ⁣around half of ​secondary‌ infections,‌ or even more.

The early studies‌ led public health authorities to argue that everyone should wear ‌a mask at​ all times when out in public or ‍crowded places. This,⁣ in turn, helped drive draconian universal masking‌ policies, including in schools, in a bid to reduce the spread of ‍COVID-19.

For instance, Dr. Anthony Fauci, former director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), initially discouraged universal mask-wearing early in the pandemic but later did a U-turn.

Initially,‍ “we didn’t realize the⁣ extent of asymptotic spread,” Dr. ⁤Fauci said in⁣ July 2020, adding that later, “we fully realized that there are a lot ‍of people who​ are asymptomatic who ⁤are spreading infection.”

“So it became clear that we absolutely should be wearing masks⁤ consistently,” Dr. Fauci said at the time.

But new⁣ research calls into question the significance ​of the threat of silent transmission, which ‌comes ‌as COVID-19⁢ cases are on the rise in America, ‍driving what some are calling ⁤a renewed pandemic ‌”hysteria” and calls ⁤for a fresh round of ⁣restrictions, including mask mandates.

‘Very Few Emissions’ Before Symptom Onset

The‌ new study,‌ published in the August issue of The Lancet’s Microbe ⁢journal, shows that people who are sick with COVID-19 but don’t show any symptoms have ​a limited ability to spread the virus to other people.

Participants in the British⁢ study, which was carried out by researchers at ⁢Imperial College London, were unvaccinated healthy adults aged 18-30 who were intentionally infected with COVID-19.

The subjects ‌were monitored under controlled⁣ circumstances while self-reporting symptoms three times per day, ⁢and researchers collected nose and throat swabs​ from them ‍daily, checking for the presence of the virus.

The researchers‍ also tested the ⁢inside of ‍masks worn by the participants, checked their‍ hands,⁣ and examined the air ​and surfaces of⁢ rooms that the subjects were kept in for a‍ minimum of 14 days.

Ultimately, the researchers‌ found that less than 10 percent‍ of the viral emissions from⁢ infected participants took place before the​ first symptoms emerged.

“Very few emissions occurred before the first reported symptom (7%) and hardly any ⁤before the first ⁢positive lateral flow‍ antigen test (2%),” the authors of the study ‌wrote.

The new study—which takes the form ​of a⁤ rigorous, controlled “challenge study” rather than the earlier modeling studies that relied ⁤on subjective inputs and assumptions⁤ of‌ researchers—contradicts earlier ⁣research that set the tone for much of ⁤the prevailing narrative. That early research ‌appears to⁣ have inflated the perceived threat of presymptomatic spread.

The⁢ latest study, suggesting that silent ⁢transmission ⁣is ⁤far less significant, comes amid⁤ a⁢ growing drumbeat ‌of‍ alarm as COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations, and deaths are on the rise—along with⁢ calls in some circles⁣ for renewed restrictions.

By contrast, many ⁢are calling‍ for cool heads to prevail—or are urging civil disobedience if‍ lockdowns or other mandates are ⁢reimposed.

‘Artifactually Inflated’?

Some early studies, such as one published in August 2020 called “Temporal Dynamics In Viral Shedding and Transmissibility of COVID-19,” suggested that people who were‍ presymptomatic or asymptomatic​ accounted for a large proportion of ⁤secondary infections.

This particular study‌ estimated that 44 ⁤percent of secondary cases were infected during the presymptomatic stage, while ‍concluding⁤ that “disease​ control measures should be⁢ adjusted to account for​ probably substantial presymptomatic transmission.”

The authors ⁢of‌ the study admitted that it



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