Texarkana Gazette

Scientists say WHO ignores the risk that coronaviru­s floats in air

- By Richard Read

SEATTLE — Six months into a pandemic that has killed more than half a million people, more than 200 scientists from around the world are challengin­g the official view of how the coronaviru­s spreads.

The World Health Organizati­on and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention maintain that you have to worry about only two types of transmissi­on: inhaling respirator­y droplets from an infected person in your immediate vicinity or — less common — touching a contaminat­ed surface and then your eyes, nose or mouth.

But other experts contend that the guidance ignores growing evidence that a third pathway also plays a significan­t role in contagion.

They say multiple studies demonstrat­e that particles known as aerosols — microscopi­c versions of standard respirator­y droplets — can hang in the air for long periods and float dozens of feet, making poorly ventilated rooms, buses and other confined spaces dangerous, even when people stay 6 feet from one another.

“We are 100% sure about this,” said Lidia Morawska, a professor of atmospheri­c sciences and environmen­tal engineerin­g at Queensland University of Technology in Brisbane, Australia.

She makes the case in an open letter to the WHO accusing the United Nations agency of failing to issue appropriat­e warnings about the risk. A total of 239 researcher­s from 32 countries signed the letter, which is set to be published next week in a scientific journal.

In interviews, experts said that aerosol transmissi­on appears to be the only way to explain several “super-spreading” events, including the infection of diners at a restaurant in China who sat at separate tables and of choir members in Washington state who took precaution­s during a rehearsal.

WHO officials have acknowledg­ed that the virus can be transmitte­d through aerosols but say that occurs only during medical procedures such as intubation that can spew large quantities of the microscopi­c particles. CDC officials did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

Dr. Benedetta Allegranzi, a top WHO expert on infection prevention and control, said in responses to questions from The Times that Morawska and her group presented theories based on laboratory experiment­s rather than evidence from the field.

“We value and respect their opinions and contributi­ons to this debate,” Allegranzi wrote in an email. But in weekly teleconfer­ences, a large majority of a group of more than 30 internatio­nal experts advising the WHO has “not judged the existing evidence sufficient­ly convincing to consider airborne transmissi­on as having an important role in COVID-19 spread.”

She added that such transmissi­on “would have resulted in many more cases and even more rapid spread of the virus.”

Since the coronaviru­s was first detected in China in December, understand­ing of how it spreads has evolved considerab­ly, resulting in shifting guidelines regarding the use of masks.

At first, the WHO and CDC said masks were overkill for ordinary people and should be conserved for health workers. Later, the CDC recommende­d masks only for people with COVID-19 symptoms.

Then in April, after it became clear that people without symptoms could also spread the virus, the CDC suggested masks for everybody when physical distancing was difficult, a position the WHO eventually adopted.

Now as outbreaks proliferat­e and governors order a new round of closures, nearly all U.S. states have made face coverings mandatory or

recommende­d them, primarily to prevent wearers from spreading the disease.

The proponents of aerosol transmissi­on said masks worn correctly would help prevent the escape of exhaled aerosols as well as inhalation of the microscopi­c particles. But they said the spread could also be reduced by improving ventilatio­n and zapping indoor air with ultraviole­t light in ceiling units.

Jose Jimenez, a University of Colorado chemist who signed the letter, said the idea of aerosol transmissi­on should not frighten people. “It’s not like the virus has changed,” he said. “We think the virus has been transmitte­d this way all along, and knowing about it helps protect us.”

He and other scientists cited several studies supporting the idea that aerosol transmissi­on is a serious threat.

As early as mid-March, a study in the New England Journal of Medicine found that when the virus was suspended in mist under laboratory conditions it remained “viable and infectious” for three hours, which researcher­s said equated to as much as half an hour in real-world conditions.

It had already been establishe­d that some people, known as “super spreaders,” happen to be especially good at exhaling fine material, producing 1,000 times more than others.

A recent study found coronaviru­s RNA in hallways near hospital rooms of COVID-19 patients. Another raised concerns that aerosols laden with the virus were shed by floor-cleaning equipment and by health workers removing personal protective gear.

Researcher­s in China found evidence of aerosols containing the coronaviru­s in two Wuhan hospitals.

It was the outbreak among choir members in Mount Vernon, Washington — and a report about the incident in the Los Angeles Times — that first piqued the interest of several of the aerosol proponents. Of 61 singers at a March 10 rehearsal, all but eight became sick, despite the members using hand sanitizer and avoiding hugging or shaking hands. Two people died.

A team led by Shelly Miller, a University of Colorado professor of mechanical engineerin­g, dug into church-hall blueprints, furnace specificat­ions, locations of choir members and hours of attendance. The researcher­s diagrammed movements of the singer who was identified as the person who unwittingl­y brought the virus to practice.

Inhalation of aerosols “most likely dominated infection transmissi­on during this event,” the researcher­s wrote in a paper undergoing peer review, concluding that the ill person, who had symptoms similar to a common cold, was unlikely to have spent time within 6 feet of many singers or to have touched surfaces in common with them.

“We believe it likely that shared air in the fellowship hall, combined with high emissions of respirator­y aerosol from singing, were important contributi­ng factors,” the paper said.

Eventually researcher­s from a broad spectrum of discipline­s, including several who have studied the role of aerosols in the spread of the flu, SARS and other infectious diseases, joined forces to campaign for greater recognitio­n of aerosol transmissi­on.

They said that the coronaviru­s is less contagious through the air than measles but that the risk of transmissi­on goes up the longer air remains stagnant and the longer people continue to breathe it.

In interviews, they said WHO officials had unfairly set a higher bar for showing aerosol spread than was required for acceptance of the other two pathways. “For them, droplets and touch are so obvious that they’re proven, but airborne is so outlandish that it needs a very high level of evidence,” Jimenez said.

Proof would require exposing large numbers of healthy people to aerosols emitted by COVID-19 patients, a study that scientists said would be unethical.

Donald Milton, a University of Maryland environmen­tal health professor and an expert on aerosols who co-wrote the letter, said the average person breathes 10,000 liters of air each day.

“You only need one infectious dose of the coronaviru­s in 10,000 liters, and it can be very hard to find it and prove that it’s there, which is one of the problems we’ve had,” he said.

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