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the reason such strategies work is that most viral transmission occurs at home. while workplace outbreaks have happened and are an issue in and of themselves, household transmission was and is a major driver of the pandemic. the reality is that you spend more time with the people you live with than with most others in your life. as any parent with young children knows, when a viral illness infects one member of the family, it will quickly infect everyone else in the house. a recent updated systematic review found that the secondary attack rate — in other words, the risk of the virus infecting another member of the same household once one person was infected — was almost 20 per cent overall. however, when researchers looked at studies done between july 2020 and march 2021, during the worst of the second and third waves, the secondary attack rate was over 30 per cent. there was also some evidence that the secondary attack rate went up as more infectious variants emerged.
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