Los Angeles Times

CDC says virus spreads mainly via air

In unannounce­d shift, agency says inhaled aerosols are the main source of contagion.

- By Richard Read

SEATTLE — The coronaviru­s spreads most commonly in the air, via droplets or other tiny respirator­y particles that apparently can remain suspended and inhaled, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says in new guidance.

The smaller particles, known as aerosols, are produced when an infected person coughs, sneezes, sings, talks or breathes and can be inhaled into someone’s nose, mouth, airways or lungs, according to the CDC, which says that, in general, indoor settings without good ventilatio­n increase the risk of contagion.

“This is thought to be the main way the virus spreads,” the CDC has posted on its website. “There is growing evidence that droplets and airborne particles can remain suspended in the air and be breathed in by others and travel distances beyond six feet (for example, during choir practice, in restaurant­s or in fitness classes).”

Experts on aerosols and the coronaviru­s said the change constitute­s a profound shift in understand­ing of how the virus that has claimed almost 200,000 lives in the U.S. spreads. However, the updated two-page explanatio­n provided little new guidance on how to protect against airborne transmissi­on.

Previously, the federal health agency had said the coronaviru­s spreads mainly between people within about six feet of one another and through direct propulsion of exhaled droplets that land in the noses and mouths of individual­s nearby. The CDC also said — and still says — that people may become infected by touching something that has the virus on it and then touching their mouth, nose or eyes, but that touch is not the main way it spreads.

Researcher­s studying transmissi­on of the deadly virus noticed the new guidance Sunday on the CDC’s website, labeled as an update from Friday. As with some other updates, the CDC made the fundamenta­l changes to its guidance without issuing an announceme­nt.

The CDC did not respond Sunday to requests to discuss the update.

In the guidance, the CDC website says that in addition to wearing masks, washing hands and staying “at least six feet away” from others, people should stay home and isolate themselves when sick and “use air purifiers to help reduce airborne germs in indoor spaces.” Previously, the advice was to maintain “good social distance” of “about six feet.”

The CDC and the World Health Organizati­on have long resisted the notion that the coronaviru­s spreads farther than about six feet through the air, with the WHO initially maintainin­g that airborne transmissi­on occurred only during certain medical procedures. But in July, under growing pressure from researcher­s, WHO acknowledg­ed that the virus could linger in the air indoors and potentiall­y infect people even when they practice social distancing.

Aerosol scientists have found mounting evidence — including “super-spreading ” events such as choir practices in which multiple people were infected — that the virus can spread through microscopi­c respirator­y particles. This week, the scientific journal Indoor Air accepted a paper for publicatio­n that found that many of the 53 choir singers who became sick after attending a March 10 practice in Mount Vernon, Wash., likely caught COVID-19 through airborne transmissi­on.

Jose-Luis Jimenez, a University of Colorado Boulder aerosol scientist and one of the authors of that report, said Sunday that the CDC’s updated guidance represente­d a major shift. Until now, he said, agency scientists have said the virus is transmitte­d through the air when droplets shoot out of a person’s mouth or nose in the form of projectile­s, directly infecting another person.

“They changed it and didn’t tell anybody,” he said.

Donald Milton, a University

of Maryland environmen­tal health professor and an expert on aerosols, said Sunday that the CDC has come around to the concept of airborne transmissi­on as evidence has accumulate­d, and he noted that the agency has made unannounce­d changes to its guidance in the past.

“They’ve been paying attention and moving in response to research, so I’m glad to see that they’re continuing and that there’s nobody getting in the way,” he said.

Without notice in May, the CDC altered guidance for reopening houses of worship, deleting a warning posted the previous day that said the act of singing may contribute to coronaviru­s transmissi­on — a switch reportedly due to pressure from the White House. Friday’s updated guidance identified singing as one of the activities that could produce infectious aerosols.

Jimenez and Milton both said it’s important to wear masks to reduce the risk of spreading and contractin­g COVID-19. They said it’s crucial to make sure face coverings fit properly, so that aerosols don’t escape or enter through gaps in the mask around the nose or mouth.

“Aerosols can travel farther than six feet, but they’re more concentrat­ed the closer you get, so standing as far away as possible reduces risk,” Milton said. “The reason that bars have been such a big problem is that people get loud when they get alcohol on board and move close together to hear, and you can’t drink a beer or a shot with a mask on.”

Milton and Shelly Miller, another aerosol researcher at the University of Colorado Boulder, are studying ways that singing and playing wind instrument­s might be made safer through distancing, ventilatio­n and masking with various types of materials. The research is funded by national choral and instrument­al associatio­ns whose members have been unable to gather during the pandemic.

Good ventilatio­n reduces risk indoors, as does simply opening windows to let air circulate, the researcher­s said. Ceiling units that use ultraviole­t light to kill the virus are also showing promise, they said.

Milton and Jimenez were among a group of researcher­s who drafted an open letter to WHO, ultimately signed by 239 researcher­s from 32 countries, that urged officials to accept the possibilit­y that aerosols play a major role in spreading the virus. WHO revised its guidelines after receiving the letter July 6, saying that airborne transmissi­on had not been definitive­ly demonstrat­ed but recommendi­ng that people avoid poorly ventilated, crowded spaces.

The CDC has now taken another significan­t step to acknowledg­e the role of aerosols, Jimenez said.

“The entire field of aerosol science is telling them that the understand­ing of ballistic droplets is outdated, and it’s really aerosols that are spreading the virus,” he said.

‘There is growing evidence that droplets and airborne particles can remain suspended in the air and be breathed in by others and travel distances beyond six feet.’ — Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

 ?? Richard Read Los Angeles Times ?? RESEARCHER Tehya Stockman plays clarinet in a lab at the University of Colorado Boulder to measure output of aerosols, thought to spread the coronaviru­s.
Richard Read Los Angeles Times RESEARCHER Tehya Stockman plays clarinet in a lab at the University of Colorado Boulder to measure output of aerosols, thought to spread the coronaviru­s.

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