Sure, but what they don't tell you in the title is that the number of household transmissions is incredibly low in the first place (39k of 780k cases | ~5%) and most of that transmission is child-to-child (16k cases), child-to-adult made up (12k) of those cases. Further, it's telling that most of the transmission was reported during Omicron and beyond, long after vaccines were widely available and adopted.
Policy makers want really badly to justify what they did to kids during the pandemic, but even with this report's poor methodology, the data just doesn't back up the narrative that kids were "killing grandma" by bringing covid home from school.
Policy makers want really badly to justify what they did to kids during the pandemic, but even with this report's poor methodology, the data just doesn't back up the narrative that kids were "killing grandma" by bringing covid home from school.