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. 2021 May 31;376(1829):20200267. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2020.0267

Figure 2.

Figure 2.

An illustration of the household branching process with contact tracing. Households are identified by letters in the bottom right-hand corner of each rectangle. The infection is discovered in case 4. This quarantines household B and initiates contact tracing of connected households A, C and D. The backwards tracing attempt to household A succeeds, with a time delay of 2 days. Household C is traced immediately, quarantining several cases early in their infection. When there is symptom onset in one of these cases the contact tracing process will propagate again by attempting to reach household E, potentially after a testing delay. The tracing attempt to household D did not succeed, and this household will continue to behave as normal and spread the infection until an intervention is applied through a different route. The x-axis refers to the temporal evolution of the transmission process in this example. (Online version in colour.)