Los Angeles Times

Contagion, from distance of 20 feet

A South Korean study’s f indings raise concern that six feet apart is not safe enough.

- BY VIC TORIA KIM

SEOUL — Dr. Lee Juhyung has largely avoided restaurant­s in recent months, but on the few occasions he’s dined out, he’s developed a strange, if sensible, habit: whipping out a small anemometer to check the airf low.

It’s a precaution he has been taking since a June experiment in which he and colleagues re- created the conditions at a restaurant in Jeonju, a city in southweste­rn South Korea, where diners contracted the coronaviru­s from an out- oftown visitor. Among them was a high school student who became infected after f ive minutes of exposure from more than 20 feet away.

The results of the study, for which Lee and other epidemiolo­gists enlisted the help of an engineer who specialize­s in aerodynami­cs, were published last week in the Journal of Korean Medical Science. The conclusion­s raised concerns that the widely accepted standard of six feet of social distance may not be far enough to keep people safe.

The study — adding to a growing body of evidence on airborne transmissi­on of the virus — highlighte­d how South Korea’s meticulous and often invasive contact tracing regime has enabled researcher­s to closely track how the virus moves through population­s.

“In this outbreak, the distances between infector and infected persons were ... farther than the generally accepted 2 meter [ 6.6- foot] droplet transmissi­on range,” the study’s authors wrote. “The guidelines on

quarantine and epidemiolo­gical investigat­ion must be updated to ref lect these factors for control and prevention of COVID- 19.”

KJ Seung, an infectious disease expert and chief of strategy and policy for the nonprofit Partners in Health’s Massachuse­tts COVID response, said the study was a reminder of the risk of indoor transmissi­on as many nations hunker down for the winter. The official definition of a “close contact” — 15 minutes, within six feet — isn’t foolproof.

In his work on Massachuse­tts’ contact tracing program, he said, business owners and school administra­tors have f ixated on the “close contact” standard, thinking just 14 minutes of exposure, or spending hours in the same room at a distance farther than six feet, is safe.

“There’s a real misconcept­ion about this in the public,” said Seung, who was not involved in the South Korea study. “They’re think

ing, if I’m not a close contact, I will magically be protected.”

Seung said the study pointed to the need for contact tracers around the world to widen the net in looking for people who had potentiall­y been infected and to alert people at lower risk that they may have been exposed.

Linsey Marr, a civil and environmen­tal engineerin­g professor at Virginia Tech who studies the transmissi­on of viruses in the air, said the f ive- minute window in which the student, identif ied in the study as “A,” was infected was notable because the droplet was large enough to carry a viral load, but small enough to travel 20 feet through the air.

“‘ A’ had to get a large dose in just f ive minutes, provided by larger aerosols probably about 50 microns,” she said. “Large aerosols or small droplets overlappin­g in that gray area can transmit disease further than one or two meters [ 3.3

to 6.6 feet] if you have strong airf low.”

The South Korean study began with a mystery. When a high school senior in Jeonju tested positive for the virus June 17, epidemiolo­gists were stumped because the city hadn’t had a coronaviru­s case in two months. North Jeolla province, where Jeonju is located, hadn’t had one for a month. The girl hadn’t traveled out of the region in recent weeks and had largely gone from home to school and back.

Contact tracers turned to the country’s Epidemic Investigat­ion Support System, a digital platform introduced in South Korea amid the pandemic that allows investigat­ors to access cellphone location informatio­n and credit card data of infected individual­s in as little as 10 minutes.

Cellphone GPS data revealed that the student had brief ly overlapped with another known coronaviru­s patient from a different city and province altogether, a door- to- door saleswoman who had visited Jeonju. Their connection was a firstf loor restaurant on the afternoon of June 12 — for just five minutes.

Authoritie­s in the city of Daejeon, where the door- todoor saleswoman was visiting from, said the woman did not tell contact tracers she’d visited Jeonju, about an hour’s drive away, where her company held a meeting with 80 people on the sixth f loor of the building with the restaurant.

Lee, a professor at the Jeonbuk National University Medical School who has also been helping local authoritie­s carry out epidemiolo­gical investigat­ions, went to the restaurant and was surprised by how far the two had been sitting. CCTV recordings showed the two never spoke, or touched any surfaces in common — door handles, cups or cutlery. From the sway of a light f ixture, he could tell the air conditioni­ng unit in the ceiling was on at the time.

Lee and his team re- created the conditions in the restaurant — researcher­s sat at tables as stand- ins — and measured the airf low. The high school student and a third diner who was infected had been sitting directly along the f low of air from an air conditione­r; other diners who had their back to the airf low were not infected. Through genome sequencing, the team conf irmed the three patients’ virus genomic types matched.

“Incredibly, despite sitting a far distance away, the airf low came down the wall and created a valley of wind. People who were along that line were infected,” Lee said. “We concluded this was a droplet transmissi­on, and beyond two meters.”

The pattern of infection in the restaurant showed it was transmissi­on through small droplets or larger aerosols either landing on the face or being breathed in, said Marr, the Virginia Tech professor who was not involved in the study. The measured air velocity in the restaurant, which did not have windows or a ventilatio­n system, was about a meter per second, the equivalent of a blowing fan.

“Eating indoors at a restaurant is one of the riskiest things you can do in a pandemic,” she said. “Even if there is distancing, as this shows and other studies show, the distancing is not enough.”

The study was published at a time when South Korea, like many other countries, is on edge amid a new wave of coronaviru­s infections, with daily case rates hovering around 600 in recent days. Seoul, the capital, this week began requiring restaurant­s to close by 9 p. m., limiting coffee shops to takeout only and forcing clubs and karaoke bars to shut down.

The research echoed the findings of a July study out of Guangzhou, China, which looked at infections among three families who dined at a restaurant along the f low of air conditioni­ng at tables that were three feet apart, overlappin­g for about an hour. Ten of the diners tested positive for the coronaviru­s.

Contact tracers in South Korea similarly mapped out a large outbreak at a Starbucks in Paju in August, when 27 people were infected by a woman sitting under a second- f loor ceiling air conditioni­ng unit.

Seung, of Partners in Health, said that by retracing infection routes epidemiolo­gical investigat­ors in South Korea had helped researcher­s worldwide better understand the coronaviru­s’ spread.

“I showed it to my team doing contact tracing in Massachuse­tts, and their jaws are dropping,” Seung said. “We know how hard it is to do something like that — it’s impressive.”

 ?? A BANNER Ahn Young- j oon Associated Press ?? in front of City Hall in Seoul emphasizes enhanced social distancing, reminding passersby, “We have to stop before COVID- 19 stops everything.”
A BANNER Ahn Young- j oon Associated Press in front of City Hall in Seoul emphasizes enhanced social distancing, reminding passersby, “We have to stop before COVID- 19 stops everything.”

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