CDC: People Who've Had COVID-19 Twice as Likely to Have Eaten at a Restaurant Before Developing
CDC: People Who've Had COVID-19 Twice as Likely to Have Eaten at a Restaurant Before Developing Symptoms
Thinking of going out to eat during this pandemic? According to a recent study from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, adults over the age of 18 who tested positive for the coronavirus are twice as likely to have dined at a restaurant two weeks before reporting symptoms, CNN reports.
The study used data from 314 adults throughout 10 states who experienced COVID-19 symptoms in July. Of those adults, 154 tested positive, and 160 came back negative.
Patients were asked about their mask-wearing habits, as well as their daily activities, like going to the gym or grocery shopping. Though there were few differences between the positive and negative sets, one thing stuck out: those who tested positive were more likely to have dined at a restaurant 14 days prior to reporting symptoms.
In addition to dining at a restaurant, case-patients were more likely to report going to a bar/coffee shop, but only when the analysis was restricted to participants without close contact with persons with known COVID-19 before illness onset, the study reads.
Read more:
https://www.clevescene.com/scene-and-heard/archives/2020/09/12/cdc-people-whove-had-covid-19-twice-as-likely-to-have-eaten-at-a-restaurant-before-developing-symptoms