Premium
Clusters of 2019 coronavirus disease (COVID‐19) cases in Chinese tour groups
Author(s) -
Kong Dechuan,
Wang Yuanping,
Lu Lu,
Wu Huanyu,
Ye Chuchu,
Wagner Abram L.,
Yang Jixing,
Zheng Yaxu,
Gong Xiaohuan,
Zhu Yiyi,
Jin Bihong,
Xiao Wenjia,
Mao Shenghua,
Jiang Chenyan,
Lin Sheng,
Han Ruobing,
Yu Xiao,
Cui Peng,
Fang Qiwen,
Lu Yihan,
Pan Hao
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
transboundary and emerging diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.392
H-Index - 63
eISSN - 1865-1682
pISSN - 1865-1674
DOI - 10.1111/tbed.13729
Subject(s) - outbreak , china , transmission (telecommunications) , covid-19 , tourism , geography , air travel , disease , cluster (spacecraft) , demography , index case , socioeconomics , coronavirus , veterinary medicine , medicine , virology , telecommunications , infectious disease (medical specialty) , engineering , sociology , archaeology , aviation , aerospace engineering , computer science , programming language
International travel may facilitate the spread of the novel coronavirus disease (COVID‐19). The study describes clusters of COVID‐19 cases within Chinese tour groups travelling in Europe January 16–28. We compared characteristics of cases and non‐cases to determine transmission dynamics. The index case travelled from Wuhan, China, to Europe on 16 January 2020, and to Shanghai, China, on 27 January 2020, within a tour group (group A). Tour groups with the same outbound flight (group B) or the same tourism venue (group D) and all Chinese passengers on the inbound flight (group C) were investigated. The outbreak involved 11 confirmed cases, 10 suspected cases and six tourists who remained healthy. Group A, involving seven confirmed cases and six suspected cases, consisted of familial transmission followed by propagative transmission. There was less pathogenicity with propagative transmission than with familial transmission. Disease was transmitted in shared outbound flights, shopping venues within Europe and inbound flight back to China. The novel coronavirus caused clustered cases of COVID‐19 in tour groups. When tourism and travel opens up, governments will need to improve screening at airports and consider increased surveillance of tour groups—particularly those with older tour members.