Daily Southtown

The CDC is losing credibilit­y with each messaging flip

- By Faye Flam Faye Flam is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. She has a degree in geophysics from the California Institute of Technology.

The CDC posted and then retracted a statement on Sept. 21 about COVID-19 being an “airborne” disease. While the switch generated tons of attention, infectious disease experts say it’s not clear it would have made much difference if the word had remained. The term might just confuse the public even more.

The more serious problem is thatwe are losing faith in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention just whenwe need it the most. Until recently, the organizati­on was a model for similar ones around the world andwas admired as a trusted source of informatio­n.

“The CDC needs towork out what their messaging is because lately it’s been terrible,” says University of Massachuse­tts biology professor Erin Bromage, who has been offering advice on risk reduction throughout the pandemic.

Airborne transmissi­on means different things to different people. If thrown at the public with no explanatio­n, it might suggest, wrongly, that conversati­ons with neighbors across the street are high risk. They aren’t. What scientists are learning is that airborne particles carrying the virus are dispersed outside, where the risk is low. Infectious disease experts have told me they do socialize outdoors or with windows open.

But virus particles can build up indoors. That means that in poorly ventilated spaces, people may become infected even if they remain more than 6 feet apart. That’s the important part of the message— that people might get infected in crowded, poorly ventilated indoor spaces.

Nonetheles­s, the term “airborne” could easily generate fears thatwould further confuse the public.

“I think we really need to take away all the terminolog­y and translate that to practical terms because I think the confusion comes from different fields having a different view of what aerosol means and what needs to be done,” says Muge Cevik, an infectious disease specialist at the University of St. Andrews in the U.K. The term “aerosol” is often used interchang­eably with airborne, though there are distinctio­ns, none of which matter for any practical recommenda­tions from the CDC.

In a health care setting, said Cevik, “airborne” means patients need to be in a negative pressure unit and health careworker­s need towear full protective gear and N95 masks. That’s the case for measles, tuberculos­is and chickenpox. Most hospitals took those precaution­s early on with SARSCoV-2, she says. But they’ve since found that wearing ordinary surgical masks outside of the intensive-care unit works to avoid acquiring the virus from patients.

In hospitals, Cevik says, most infections are coming from close contact with patients, or being in the same room with an infected patient for a prolonged period of time. That’s shown up in contact tracing studies looking at howthe disease is spreading in the wider community too. Length of exposure matters aswell as proximity.

She worries that the concept of airborne transmissi­on has become politicize­d, the sameway asymptomat­ic transmissi­on has, along with the role of children and schools.

One of the correct implicatio­ns of airborne transmissi­on is that many people who got the disease were not careless or immoral, but simply stuck in poorly ventilated environmen­ts— prisons, homeless shelters, apartment buildings or conference spaces. Some are stuck in bad working conditions, such as meatpackin­g facilities.

Air filtration matters too. Bromage, the biology professor at UMass, has argued that because airplane cabins are better ventilated than most indoor spaces, flying is surprising­ly lowrisk. There have been a few documented airplane transmissi­ons, mostly from before airlines required masks and were still allowing coughing people onboard. But the number of transmissi­ons is tiny compared with the total number of airline passengers.

What the CDC appears to be retracting, he says, is the notion that airborne transmissi­on is the primary route of disease spread. While there’s agreement that it happens and that it matters, it’s not establishe­d whether this is the primary route, or whether the so-called droplet route is more important, by which people infect others at close range.

But the appearance of inconsiste­ncy is bad, he says. “It took a long time to get to the recognitio­n that airborne is a part of this, and then to immediatel­y change and pull that away just sows huge doubts about what people should believe from CDC,” he says. “Something is breaking down in the public disseminat­ion process that does not seem appropriat­e for an organizati­on that is as good as they are.”

Bromage says the problems at the CDC have more to do with its public face than its internal workings. The agency is still full of great scientists, he says. It even still has some of the same people who, after the 2001 anthrax attacks, devised what he considers an excellent public messaging playbook. But they’re not following this playbook now.

In fact, it’s not clear if they’re following any playbook at all.

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