transmissibility
noun [ U ] uk/trænzˌmɪs.əˈbɪl.ə.ti/ us/ˌtrænz.mɪs.əˈbɪl.ə.t̬i/
传播性
the fact of a disease, etc. being able to be passed from one person or animal to another
The study concluded that the transmissibility of COVID-19 depends on the viral load. 这项研究得出结论,COVID-19的传播性取决于病毒载量。
- More examples
- Researchers test the transmissibility of the virus by putting two ferret cages next to each other, one containing an infected animal and the other an uninfected one.
- Computer models suggest that a pandemic virus that infected people with the same transmissibility as a typical flu virus could travel around the globe in as little as two weeks.
- Prion diseases are widely recognized for their transmissibility, and it is this feature that has been studied most extensively.
- A small trial found that antifungal shampoo increases the rate of eradication, which may reduce the transmissibility of the organism.
- Infected mothers can give HIV to their children, but transmissibility can be reduced dramatically.