What Is Community Transmission, Is Herd Immunity An Effective Strategy-Everything You Wanted To Know About The Spread Of COVID-19

Two top doctors break down all things complex on COVID-19. From understanding community transmission and if India has reached that stage, to the right testing strategy for the country now

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Two top doctors break down all things complex on COVID-19. From understanding community transmission and if India has reached that stage, to the right testing strategy for the country now

What is community transmission?

Simply put, community transmission is the phase when an infection spreads to such an extent that it is impossible to trace its source in a patient. In the case of COVID-19 or coronavirus disease, which is caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 or SARS-CoV-2, this is the time when you find that even people with no travel or contact history test positive for the infection.

For a pandemic like coronavirus, there are four stages of transmission. First, when the infection travels outside the country of origin—you can trace it to people with travel history to an affected area. Second, local transmission, when a cluster of cases is traced to a particular area. Containment measures and contact tracing can check the spread of the infection at this stage. The third stage is community transmission. The fourth stage is when the disease becomes endemic (or never goes away) in some countries.

Has India reached the community transmission stage for coronavirus disease?

No. “There is no such thing as an Indian epidemic. There is a Delhi epidemic, a Mumbai epidemic, an Indore epidemic etc. They’ll all peak at different times,” says Dr Ambarish Satwik, a vascular and endovascular surgeon at Sir Ganga Ram Hospital in Delhi.

But, in big cities like Delhi and Mumbai, there appears to be evidence of community transmission. “I am basing it on my experience of dealing with patients who can’t trace it to a particular contact,” says Dr Satwik, adding that “not saying it (community transmission) doesn’t change the reality on the ground”.

“We are dealing with a virus that spreads very fast,” says Professor K. Srinath Reddy, President, Public Health Foundation of India (PHFI) and Adjunct Professor of Epidemiology at Harvard. 

“It can spread from people who are kno...

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