2021
DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2020.0261
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The impact of school reopening on the spread of COVID-19 in England

Abstract: By mid-May 2020, cases of COVID-19 in the UK had been declining for over a month; a multi-phase emergence from lockdown was planned, including a scheduled partial reopening of schools on 1 June 2020. Although evidence suggests that children generally display mild symptoms, the size of the school-age population means the total impact of reopening schools is unclear. Here, we present work from mid-May 2020 that focused on the imminent opening of schools and consider what these results imply for future policy. We… Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(31 citation statements)
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References 44 publications
(67 reference statements)
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“…Throughout much of our work with this model, the values of α and τ are key in determining behaviour -in particular the role of school children in transmission [16]. We argue that a low τ and a low α are the only combination that are consistent with the growing body of data suggesting that levels of seroprevalence show only moderate variation across age-ranges [17], yet children do not appear to play a major role in transmission [18,19].…”
Section: Relationship Between Age-dependent Susceptibility and Detectabilitymentioning
confidence: 56%
“…Throughout much of our work with this model, the values of α and τ are key in determining behaviour -in particular the role of school children in transmission [16]. We argue that a low τ and a low α are the only combination that are consistent with the growing body of data suggesting that levels of seroprevalence show only moderate variation across age-ranges [17], yet children do not appear to play a major role in transmission [18,19].…”
Section: Relationship Between Age-dependent Susceptibility and Detectabilitymentioning
confidence: 56%
“…It includes models that are used in the ongoing overview of the epidemic with weekly consensus estimates of the Reproduction number [19,20], short term and medium-term projections [36] and real-time data stream monitoring [37] all playing a part. There are time-sensitive, changing policy questions, such as the impact of mass gatherings [38], reopening schools in May 2020 [39][40][41], the introduction of support bubbles [42] or the impact of contact tracing and lockdown [43]. We have evidence that drove the understanding of nosocomial and care home transmission [44,45], the importance of segmenting and shielding [46] as well as the possible impact of waning immunity [47].…”
Section: Putting This Special Issue Togethermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At the time of writing this paper, the role played by schools and school-aged children in community transmission is still controversial [see European Center for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) (2020) for an exhaustive review on the subject]. Studies suggest that where transmission levels are low, school openings do not significantly increase the risk of community transmission (Falk et al, 2021;Zimmerman et al, 2021), and where transmission levels are high, schools can significantly contribute to community transmission (European Center for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), 2020; Keeling et al, 2021). Furthermore, empirical data shows that the presence of school-aged children increases the risk of infection in households (Bravata et al, 2021;Gold et al, 2021).…”
Section: Spatial Clusters Of Infectionsmentioning
confidence: 99%