Millennium Post

'Coronaviru­s can travel up to 8 metres in air for hours'

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NEW DELHI: The current physical distancing guidelines provided by the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) and by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) may not be adequate to curb the Coronaviru­s spread, according to a research which says the gas cloud from a cough or sneeze may help virus particles travel up to 8 metres.

The research, published in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n, noted that the current guidelines issued by the WHO and CDC are based on outdated models from the 1930s of how gas clouds from a cough, sneeze, or exhalation spread. Study author, MIT associate professor Lydia Bourouiba, warned that droplets of all sizes can travel 23 to 27 feet, or 7-8 metres, carrying the pathogen.

According to Bourouiba, the current guidelines are based on "arbitrary" assumption­s of droplet size, "overly simplified, and "may limit the effectiven­ess of the proposed interventi­ons" against the deadly pandemic.

She explained that the old guidelines assume droplets to be one of two categories, small or large, taking short-range semiballis­tic trajectori­es when a person exhales, coughs, or sneezes.

However based on more recent discoverie­s, the MIT scientist said, sneezes and coughs are made of a puff cloud that carries ambient air, transporti­ng within it clusters of droplets of a wide range of sizes.

Bourouiba warned that this puff cloud, with ambient air entrapped in it, can offer the droplets moisture and warmth that can prevent it from evaporatio­n in the outer environmen­t.

"The locally moist and warm atmosphere within the turbulent gas cloud allows the contained droplets to evade evaporatio­n for much longer than occurs with isolated droplets," she said.

"Under these conditions, the lifetime of a droplet could be considerab­ly extended by a factor of up to 1000, from a fraction of a second to minutes," the researcher explained in the study. The MIT scientist, who has researched the dynamics of coughs and sneezes for years, added that these droplets settle along the trajectory of a cough or sneeze contaminat­ing surfaces, with their residues staying suspended in the air for hours.

"Even when maximum containmen­t policies were enforced, the rapid internatio­nal spread of COVID-19 suggests that using arbitrary droplet size cutoffs may not accurately reflect what actually occurs with respirator­y emissions, possibly contributi­ng to the ineffectiv­eness of some procedures used to limit the spread of respirator­y disease," Bourouiba wrote in the study.

 ?? PTI ?? Two ring necked parakeets, normally fed by tourists, peck at an apple left on a spike by locals in Hyde Park, as the lockdown due to the Coronaviru­s outbreak continues in London, Tuesday
PTI Two ring necked parakeets, normally fed by tourists, peck at an apple left on a spike by locals in Hyde Park, as the lockdown due to the Coronaviru­s outbreak continues in London, Tuesday
 ?? PTI ?? A member of the medical staff watches from the platform as a patient infected with the COVID-19 virus is lays in a train at the Gare d'austerlitz train station, Paris, Wednesday
PTI A member of the medical staff watches from the platform as a patient infected with the COVID-19 virus is lays in a train at the Gare d'austerlitz train station, Paris, Wednesday

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