coronavirus

26 COVID-19 Cases Linked to Unvaccinated Marin County Elementary School Teacher: CDC

The infection rate in the classroom's first two rows, nearest the teacher, was 80%

NBC Universal, Inc. A COVID-19 outbreak at a Marin County elementary school is a case study in how highly contagious the delta variant is. Jean Elle reports.

A COVID-19 outbreak at a Marin County elementary school is a case study in how highly contagious the delta variant is.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported an unvaccinated teacher felt sick in May and assumed they had allergies. School policy required them to be masked, but the teacher removed their mask to read aloud, and within days, half of the 24 students tested positive.

Classroom layout shows students' COVID-19 test results by seating chart. (Aug. 27, 2021)

The infection rate in the classroom's first two rows nearest the teacher was 80% -- eight of 10 students.

The sick students then infected siblings and parents for a total of 26 people stemming from a single case.

“It’s safe to say the index case was an unvaccinated person who was eligible to be vaccinated,” said Dr. Matt Willis, the county’s public health officer, to the Mercury News. “All the cases are unvaccinated individuals. That includes people who were eligible to be vaccinated but were unvaccinated and people who were not eligible to be vaccinated, by virtue of age.”

NBC Bay Area’s Jessica Aguirre spoke to Tracy Lam-Hine of the Marin County Health Department, and lead author of the CDC study on Marin County elementary school teacher’s COVID-19 outbreak.

The CDC report doesn't name the elementary school in Marin County.

On Friday night, the San Francisco Archdiocese, which oversees Catholic schools in Marin County, released a statement that read in part: “The incident referred to in the CDC report was an isolated circumstance and has been addressed internally.”

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