Maru Kun

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After the 2003 sars epidemic – which had involved several instances of mass infection – there was renewed interest in the notion of superspreading. For sars, it seemed to be particularly important: 20 per cent of cases caused almost 90 per cent of transmission. In contrast, diseases like plague have fewer superspreading events, with the top 20 per cent of cases responsible for only 50 per cent of transmission.[52]
The Rules of Contagion: Why Things Spread - and Why They Stop
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