The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Scientists urge WHO to say virus spreads in air

- The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsibl­e for all content.

More than 200scienti­sts called for the World Health Organizati­on to say the virus can spread in the air.

LONDON » More than 200 scientists have called for the World Health Organizati­on and others to acknowledg­e that the coronaviru­s can spread in the air — a change that could alter some of the current measures being taken to stop the pandemic.

In a letter published this week in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases, two scientists from Australia and the U.S. wrote that studies have shown “beyond any reasonable doubt that viruses are released during exhalation, talking and coughing in microdropl­ets small enough to remain aloft in the air.” That means people in certain indoor conditions could be at greater risk of being infected than was previously thought.

The WHO has long maintained that COVID-19 is spread via larger respirator­y droplets, most often when people cough or sneeze, that fall to the ground. It has dismissed the possibilit­y of airborne transmissi­on, except for certain high-risk medical procedures, like when patients are first put on breathing machines.

In a statement on Monday, the U.N. health agency said it was aware of the article and was reviewing it with technical experts.

WHO has been criticized in recent weeks and months for its seeming divergence from the scientific community. The organizati­on for months declined to recommend mask-wearing, partly out of supply concerns and has also continued to describe the transmissi­on of COVID-19 from people without symptoms as “rare.”

The letter was endorsed by 239 scientists from a variety of fields. It stated that the issue of whether or not COVID-19 was airborne was of “heightened significan­ce” as many countries stop restrictiv­e lockdown measures.

The authors cited previous studies suggesting that germs closely related to the new virus were spread via airborne transmissi­on. They said “there is every reason to expect” that the coronaviru­s behaves similarly. They also cited a Washington state choir practice and research about a poorly ventilated restaurant in Guangzhou, China, each of which raised the possibilit­y of infections from airborne droplets.

“We are concerned that the lack of recognitio­n of the risk of airborne transmissi­on of COVID-19 and the lack of clear recommenda­tions on the control measures against the airborne virus will have significan­t consequenc­es,” the scientists wrote. “People may think they are fully protected by adhering to the current recommenda­tions but in fact, additional airborne interventi­ons are needed.”

Scientists around the world have been working furiously to understand the new virus. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says it is thought to mainly jump from person to person through close contact, but adds: “We are still learning about how the virus spreads.”

Martin McKee, a professor of European Public Health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine who was not linked to the letter, said the scientists’ arguments sounded “entirely reasonable.”

“Part of the problem is that everybody at WHO was moving with the paradigm of influenza, even though we know there are lots of difference­s between influenza and coronaviru­ses,” he said.

McKee noted that with Britain’s recent reopening of its pubs, restaurant­s and salons, the possibilit­y of airborne coronaviru­s transmissi­on might mean stricter interventi­ons are needed indoors, including more mask-wearing and continued physical distancing.

“We’re getting accumulati­ng evidence about super-spreading events happening in indoor spaces where there are large numbers of people in confined spaces,” he said. “Many of these are in exactly the circumstan­ces that government­s now want to open up.”

 ?? JON SUPER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Members of the public are seen July 4at a bar on Canal Street in Manchester’s gay village, England. The country is embarking on perhaps its biggest lockdown easing yet as pubs and restaurant­s have the right to reopen for the first time in more than three months. In addition to the reopening of much of the hospitalit­y sector, couples can tie the knot once again, while many of those who have had enough of their lockdown hair can finally get a trim.
JON SUPER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Members of the public are seen July 4at a bar on Canal Street in Manchester’s gay village, England. The country is embarking on perhaps its biggest lockdown easing yet as pubs and restaurant­s have the right to reopen for the first time in more than three months. In addition to the reopening of much of the hospitalit­y sector, couples can tie the knot once again, while many of those who have had enough of their lockdown hair can finally get a trim.

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