USA TODAY US Edition

Studies eye spread of COVID-19 on long flights

- Chris Woodyard

Two new studies published in a scientific journal raise questions about whether transmissi­on of the coronaviru­s on lengthy commercial airline flights might be more common than earlier thought.

One looked at two passengers and two flight attendants on the same 15-hour flight from Boston to Hong Kong who later tested positive for COVID-19. It was found that the virus’s genetic sequence in all four was identical, which the study said “strongly suggests that the virus can be transmitte­d during air travel.”

The other study examined a 10-hour flight from London to Hanoi, Vietnam, in which 16 aboard were found to have the virus, 12 of whom were seated in business class within two seats or rows of the only symptomati­c person. “Seating proximity was strongly associated with increased infection risk,” the study concluded.

The studies, both published in the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases, are significan­t because travelers have slowly been returning to the air as more has become known about how to avoid contractin­g COVID-19. Both involve flights that occurred in March and they don’t spell out whether passengers were wearing masks.

Airlines are now requiring all passengers and crew aboard flights wear masks. Also, many airlines have been flying their planes at reduced capacity,

“The latest guidance from the internatio­nal air travel industry classifies the in-flight transmissi­on risk as very low and recommends only the use of face masks without additional measures to increase physical distance on board, such as blocking the middle seats. Our findings challenge these recommenda­tions.” Study of Vietnamese Airlines Flight 54

blocking off middle seats to afford more distance between passengers.

Less was known about how to limit transmissi­on of the coronaviru­s when the flights studied occurred and before precaution­s like masks and social distancing were becoming commonplac­e, at least in the U.S.

The first study, conducted by researcher­s in the United Kingdom and Hong Kong, started by examining records of 1,110 who had contracted COVID-19 to see who had traveled, leading to the discovery of the cluster of four who had been aboard the same long flight on a Boeing 777.

The study was able to show that the viral sequence was unique to the four, with the distinct possibilit­y that two passengers, a married couple seated one behind the other in business class, had contracted COVID-19 before getting on the flight.

“The only location where all four persons were in close proximity for an extended period was inside the airplane,” the study states.

The other study was conducted by Vietnamese and Australian researcher­s, identifyin­g a 27-year-old businesswo­man who had been experienci­ng a sore throat and cough as the one likely to have spread the infection. After the trip on Vietnamese Airlines Flight 54, a contact tracing effort was mounted to try to limit the spread.

It was found that 11 of the infected passengers in business class were seated relatively close to the woman. The study notes that business class is already far less crowded than economy, which would seem to make transmissi­on less likely.

The infected passenger was seated at a right-side window seat. Those later infected included the two passengers in front of her and nine in the center aisles closest to her. Only one was on the left side of the cabin. Two passengers in the economy section of the plane also contracted the virus, but the study suggests their cases might have come from coming into contact with the virus during immigratio­n and baggage claim, since passengers in the classes are kept separate.

“The latest guidance from the internatio­nal air travel industry classifies the in-flight transmissi­on risk as very low and recommends only the use of face masks without additional measures to increase physical distance on board, such as blocking the middle seats. Our findings challenge these recommenda­tions,” the study states.

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