Expanding on recent research on the transmission of COVID-19 via social networks, this article argues that exposure to familial and other close contacts who already have the disease may increase the severity of one’s subsequent illness. We hypothesize that having family members or close contacts who were diagnosed with COVID-19 before one’s own diagnosis exacerbates illness severity due to several potential mechanisms including changes in available social support access, increased stress and strain, and increased viral load due to the nature of one’s exposure to the novel coronavirus. We analyze administrative data of all 417 patients who were diagnosed with COVID-19 in the Chinese city of Shenzhen between January 8 and February 25, 2020. Our analyses show that, when patients had family members or close ties diagnosed with COVID-19, they experienced more severe illness. We also find that patients with infected family members or close contacts did not have significantly extended total illness duration, due to their reduced time to diagnosis. The implications of both findings are discussed.
【저자키워드】 COVID-19, family, social networks, survival analysis, Illness severity, 【초록키워드】 Stress, severity, Diagnosis, Transmission, Novel coronavirus, Viral load, Research, Patient, Analysis, close contact, Support, potential mechanism, Shenzhen, Chinese, illness duration, implication, significantly, subsequent, the disease, reduced, changes in, exacerbate, diagnosed with COVID-19, 【제목키워드】 Other, illness, influence,