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Children and staff at Georgia overnight camp test positive for coronavirus, CDC says
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A coronavirus outbreak was reported at an overnight summer camp in Georgia that did not require campers to wear face masks.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a study Friday on the outbreak, saying that it shows children are susceptible to the virus and "play an important role in transmission."
The camp, which the CDC did not name, held an orientation for 120 staff members and more than 130 trainees in mid-June, according to its Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. The staff members stayed at the camp and on June 21 were joined by more than 360 campers ranging in age from 6 to 19.
Days later, on June 23, a teenage staff member left after developing chills and later tested positive for the coronavirus. The camp began to send people home the following day and alerted the state's Department of Public Health.
Among the children and staff who were tested for the virus, 260 came back positive, with 231 of them aged 17 or younger....
According to the CDC, the camp had everyone submit documentation that they had tested negative for the virus, but did not require campers to wear face masks. Only staff members had to wear masks.
The report also noted that campers slept in cabins and participated "in a variety of indoor and outdoor activities, including daily vigorous singing and cheering."
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