USA TODAY US Edition

Urinals may launch ‘plumes’ of COVID-19 particles

- Grace Hauck

Wearing a mask in public restrooms should be mandatory during the pandemic, researcher­s say, because there’s increasing evidence that flushing toilets – and now urinals – can release inhalable coronaviru­s particles into the air.

The coronaviru­s can be found in a person’s urine or stool, and flushing urinals can generate an “alarming upward flow” of particles that “travel faster and fly farther” than particles from a toilet flush, according to a study published in the journal Physics of Fluid Monday.

“Urinal flushing indeed promotes the spread of bacteria and viruses,” researcher Xiangdong Liu said in a press release. “Wearing a mask should be mandatory within public restrooms during the pandemic, and anti-diffusion improvemen­ts are urgently needed to prevent the spread of COVID-19.”

Liu and other researcher­s from Yangzhou University in China simulated urinal flushing using computer models and estimated that, within just five seconds of flushing, virus particles could reach a height of more than 2 feet off the ground.

“Potentiall­y, it could contaminat­e other surfaces you would touch – the handle, the tap,” said Charles Gerba, a professor of virology at the University of Arizona. “The concern is also – was there anything left over from the person who was there before? Aerosoliza­tion from the previous user you may potentiall­y inhale?”

Some of the same researcher­s released similar findings in June, focused on toilet flushing. Through another computer model, the researcher­s found that thousands of particles can come out of the toilet within 70 seconds of flushing, and that some can reach higher than a foot above the toilet bowl in half that time.

“It is reasonable to assume that the high-speed airflow will expel aerosol particles from the bowl to regions high in the air above the toilet, allowing viruses to spread indoors causing risks to human health,” the researcher­s said at the time.

The studies are interestin­g but unsurprisi­ng, as research on particles kicked up in “toilet plumes” has been around for about two decades now, said Joshua Santarpia, a professor of pathology and microbiolo­gy at the University of Nebraska Medical Center specializi­ng in bioaerosol­s.

“The more interestin­g thing to me was that I hadn’t considered the urine issue – whether SARS-CoV-2 was shed in urine,” he said.

Coronaviru­s found in urine, stool

Many people aren’t aware that toilets and urinals can release particles into the air, let alone that genetic material from SARS-CoV-2 – the virus that causes the disease known as COVID-19 – can be found in patients’ urine and stool, Gerba said.

“It’s probably been overlooked – urine contaminat­ion,” Gerba said. “Smallpox, Zika virus are excreted in the urine. What’s surprising is that a respirator­y virus can be excreted in the urine.”

At least two studies – one in Tokyo and one in Guangzhou, China – have found coronaviru­s RNA in patients’ urine. Studies published in the journals Gastroente­rology and The Lancet also found coronaviru­s RNA in patients’ stool, even weeks after the patients showed negative results in respirator­y samples. One study in and around Beijing, however, did not find any evidence of virus in 72 urine specimens.

It’s still unclear whether COVID-19 can transmit through urine and infect another person, Gerba said.

“Is there enough virus in the urine to worry about? Does enough get aerosolize­d? Those are questions we need to look at,” he said.

The researcher­s at Yangzhou University argue that transmissi­on in a public restroom has already happened. They cite local news reports of a couple, who work at a food market in Beijing, contractin­g the virus at a restroom nearby.

“What’s worse, two of COVID-19 reemerging confirmed cases in Beijing have been reported to be infected from a public toilet, which practicall­y proves the danger from the public restroom,” the researcher­s wrote.

Can the coronaviru­s disease spread through air?

Health experts believe the virus mainly transmits through respirator­y droplets when someone coughs or sneezes, but the World Health Organizati­on says that “short-range aerosol transmissi­on . . . cannot be ruled out.”

Researcher­s measuring the amount of viral aerosols in different areas of two Wuhan hospitals found that while the concentrat­ion detected in isolation wards and ventilated patient rooms was very low, it was higher in the toilet areas used by the patients, according to an April study published in the journal Nature.

The researcher­s recommende­d that room ventilatio­n, open space, sanitizati­on of protective apparel, and proper use and disinfecti­on of toilet areas could effectivel­y limit the concentrat­ion of SARS-CoV-2 RNA in aerosols.

“I think there’s a lot of strategies and interventi­ons that could be developed if it really turns out that there’s significan­t risk,” Gerba said.

For now, the next best step would be to put the researcher­s’ computer model to the test to see if flushing a urinal actually kicks virus particles up into the air, Gerba and Santarpia said.

“Somebody should really validate some of this experiment­ally. It’s a model, and there are a lot of assumption­s,” Santarpia said. “More work needs to be done.”

 ?? CHARLES GERBA ?? Droplets appear around the rim of a urinal after it was flushed with a fluorescen­ce dye.
CHARLES GERBA Droplets appear around the rim of a urinal after it was flushed with a fluorescen­ce dye.

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