AUTHOR=Rubinstein Rebecca J. , Mei Wenwen , Cassidy Caitlin A. , Streeter Gabrielle , Basham Christopher , Cerami Carla , Lin Feng-Chang , Lin Jessica T. , Mollan Katie R. TITLE=Transmission prevention behaviors in US households with SARS-CoV-2 cases in 2020 JOURNAL=Frontiers in Epidemiology VOLUME=3 YEAR=2023 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/epidemiology/articles/10.3389/fepid.2023.1160214 DOI=10.3389/fepid.2023.1160214 ISSN=2674-1199 ABSTRACT=Introduction

Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) transmission frequently occurs within households, yet few studies describe which household contacts and household units are most likely to engage in transmission-interrupting behaviors.

Methods

We analyzed a COVID-19 prospective household transmission cohort in North Carolina (April to October 2020) to quantify changes in physical distancing behaviors among household contacts over 14 days. We evaluated which household contacts were most likely to ever mask at home and to ever share a bedroom with the index case between days 7–14.

Results

In the presence of a household COVID-19 infection, 24% of household contacts reported ever masking at home during the week before study entry. Masking in the home between days 7–14 was reported by 26% of household contacts and was more likely for participants who observed their household index case wearing a mask. Participants of color and participants in high-density households were more likely to mask at home. After adjusting for race/ethnicity, living density was not as clearly associated with masking. Symptomatic household contacts were more likely to share a bedroom with the index case. Working individuals and those with comorbidities avoided sharing a bedroom with the index case.

Discussion

In-home masking during household exposure to COVID-19 was infrequent in 2020. In light of the ongoing transmission of SARS-CoV-2, these findings underscore a need for health campaigns to increase the feasibility and social desirability of in-home masking among exposed household members. Joint messaging on social responsibility and prevention of breakthrough infections, reinfections, and long COVID-19 may help motivate transmission-interruption behaviors.