https://www.cnn.com/2020/04/17/health/santa-clara-coronavirus-infections-study/index.html
Far more people may have been infected by coronavirus in one California county, 
Stanford study estimates
By Michael Nedelman, CNN
Updated 10:39 PM ET, Fri April 17, 2020

(CNN) Far more people may have been infected with Covid-19 than have been 
confirmed by health officials in Santa Clara County, California, according to a 
study released Friday in preprint.

The study used an antibody blood test to estimate how many people had been 
infected with Covid-19 in the past. Other tests, like those performed with 
nasal swabs or saliva, test for the virus' genetic material, which does not 
persist long after recovery, as antibodies do.
"We found that there are many, many unidentified cases of people having Covid 
infection that were never identified with it with a virus test," said Dr.. Jay 
Bhattacharya, a professor of medicine at Stanford University and one of the 
paper's authors 
<https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.04.14.20062463v1>. "It's 
consistent with findings from around the world that this disease, this epidemic 
is further along than we thought."
The study estimated that 2.49% to 4.16% of people in Santa Clara Country had 
been infected with Covid-19 by April 1. This represents between 48,000 and 
81,000 people, which is 50 to 85 times what county officials recorded by that 
date: 956 confirmed cases.
A preprint study is a draft version of a study released to the public that 
hasn't been peer-reviewed for publication in a journal. CNN has reached out to 
the Santa Clara County Public Health Department for comment.
Similar efforts to estimate local antibody prevalence have launched in places 
like Miami-Dade County, Florida; San Miguel County, Colorado; and Los Angeles, 
California. The National Institutes of Health has a similar effort underway as 
well.
Bhattacharya said information from these studies will not only give researchers 
a better idea on antibody prevalence, but they will also vastly improve 
projections and disease modeling. Experts have said it's clear there have been 
more people infected than we've tested for, but it's unclear how much higher 
that number could be.
"All of the projection models have this as an input: how many people have been 
infected today," Bhattacharya said.
"It just helps us plan better," he added. "Before, we were making policy in the 
dark."

A Stanford University study used antibody tests to determine the prevalence of 
coronavirus infections in Santa Clara County, California.
The research may also give a more realistic sense of how deadly the virus 
really is.
"If I get the infection, how likely is it I'm going to die? That number depends 
on knowing how many people have had the infection -- not just actively have it 
now, but have had it and recovered from it," Bhattacharya said. 
If 50 times more people have had the infection, the death rate could drop by 
that same factor, putting it "somewhere between 'little worse than the flu' to 
'twice as bad as the flu' in terms of case fatality rate," Bhattacharya said. 
But he cautioned that the flu and coronavirus are still quite different. For 
one, we don't yet have a vaccine for Covid-19.
Doctors suspect, though, and are still trying to prove beyond a doubt, that 
antibodies to Covid-19 mean one is immune down the line.
The study in Santa Clara County recruited participants largely using Facebook 
ads targeted by zip code to sample various parts of the community. The study 
tested 3,330 adults and children.
"They had about five different tents set up and you just kind of drove through 
and they pricked your finger, took a blood sample and took down your 
information," one of those participants, Tony Huston, told CNN Chief Medical 
Correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta on his podcast, "Coronavirus: Fact vs. Fiction."
"I think it's human nature to want to know if you've had it or if you have the 
antibodies," Huston said.

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