Dayton Daily News

Germ alert sounds off at security bins

Viruses that cause cold-like symptoms found, study shows.

- By Martine Powers

Next time you go through airport security, it might be worth washing your hands afterward.

According to the results of a new study published by Finnish and British researcher­s, half of plastic airport security bins may carry viruses that cause respirator­y infections.

The study, published recently in the BioMed Central Infectious Diseases journal, tested swabs from surface samples of the plastic bins at Helsinki Airport that were taken at three different times during the peak of the 2015-2016 flu season.

Four of the eight samples contained the rhinovirus or adenovirus, which both cause cold-like symptoms.

The lead authors of the article, who hailed from Finland’s National Institute for Health and Welfare and the University of Nottingham, concluded that the screening trays “appear commonly contaminat­ed,” and that they are one of the surfaces where passengers are most likely to pick up harmful viruses.

“We found the highest frequency of respirator­y viruses on plastic trays used in security check areas for depositing hand-carried luggage and personal items,” the scientists wrote in their journal article. “These boxes typically cycle with high frequency to subsequent passengers, and are typically seized with a wide palm surface area and strong grip.”

The results, they said, demonstrat­ed that airports can serve as a potential riskzone for an “emerging pandemic threat” — a prospect that has already become a major concern in the aftermath of the 2002 SARS outbreak, and the 2014 Ebola epidemic.

At the conclusion of the study centered on Helsinki Airport, the researcher­s concluded that airports should offer hand sanitizer to travelers before and after each security checkpoint, and that the baggage trays should be cleaned and disinfecte­d more frequently.

But plastic bins aren’t the only place in airports where researcher­s found frequent presence of cold-causing viruses. On the buttons of the Helsinki Airport pharmacy’s payment terminal, 50 percent of samples tested positive for the rhinovirus or the human coronaviru­s.

Of the samples taken at the desks and glass dividers at the airport’s passport control checkpoint, one in three contained the rhinovirus. And when the scientists repeatedly swabbed a plastic toy dog in the airport’s children’s playground, they found that the toy played host to cold-causing viruses a whopping 67 percent of the time.

In these cases, the scientists concluded, the best approach might be the simplest one: a good old-fashioned wipedown. Frequent cleaning, they pointed out, is exactly the reason why an unlikely surface topped the list of the most virus-free spots in the airport: the toilet. Of the 42 samples taken on toilet lids, on the flush buttons, and on the door locks, there were zero samples where scientists detected the presence of a cold virus.

“No respirator­y viruses were detected in a considerab­le number of samples from the surfaces of toilets most commonly touched, which is not unexpected, as passengers may pay particular attention to limiting touch and to hand hygiene, in a washroom environmen­t,” the scientists said.

 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? As families pass through the airport, scientists want them to be aware of a recent findings. Scientists found the viruses responsibl­e for colds and influenza on the trays used at checkpoint­s.
THE NEW YORK TIMES As families pass through the airport, scientists want them to be aware of a recent findings. Scientists found the viruses responsibl­e for colds and influenza on the trays used at checkpoint­s.

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