Why some people in close quarters get COVID-19 — and others don’t

At this point of the COVID-19 pandemic, with the highly transmissible Omicron variant, it may be an all-too-familiar story: You know of a fully vaccinated household where some people tested positive for COVID — and others in the same household never tested positive at all. How is this possible? Yahoo News Medical Contributor and practicing internist Dr. Lucy McBride explains how people and the virus relate to one another in very different ways depending on various factors.

Video transcript

LUCY MCBRIDE: It can be useful at this moment of the pandemic to start to think about comparing the flu and coronavirus, not that they are equivalent at all. But you might have a case of flu in the family, in the household, and some people might get infected and others might not. Similarly, you may have a COVID case in your family and some people in the family might get COVID and some might not.

Whether or not a single person will get infected and/or sick after an exposure in the household hinges directly on the amount of virus that is put out by the COVID-positive person, and the conditions in that space, and the immune system and vaccination status of the person who is being exposed. So you can have inhaled a small viral load from the infected person, you can have inhaled a large viral load. In other words, you may have inhaled a different amount of virus.

You also have a unique response to the virus based on your underlying health conditions, your immune system, and the other factors at play. For example, if in the home you were exposed in a large room where the windows were open, that's going to be perhaps a different level of exposure than someone who is sleeping in the same room as the COVID-positive person.

You may, for example, have had three shots and you're a young healthy person and you may not get as sick as a result. We know that to be true that vaccinated people get typically less sick than people who are unvaccinated, then someone who has been unvaccinated or who has underlying health conditions. So remember that it's not an automatic that someone will get infected in the household, yet household transmission is the most common problem and the reason we see widespread transmission of a particularly contagious variant, because within the same house, people often aren't masked and they're in close quarters.

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So we're seeing that with Omicron, this highly transmissible, though less intrinsically severe variant of coronavirus, that people are contagious. They are able to transmit the virus to other people from as soon as a day after they are infected to up to 10 days after they are infected. But the more common window is between 24 hours prior to developing symptoms and five days after developing symptoms. But of course, these ranges are variable depending on the person.

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I'm recommending to my patients they follow the CDC guidelines-- that they isolate for five days and mask for day six to 10 and exercise caution during that time. I'm also recommending to my patients that if they can afford it and they can access it, to take a rapid antigen test at day five in order to leave isolation. If that rapid antigen test is negative on day five, you're pretty sure you're not contagious to other people.

If it's positive, you would test again on day six. And if you're negative on day six, then you can leave isolation. Again, a negative antigen test tells you with pretty good confidence that you're no longer carrying contagious levels of virus in your nose.

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