Toronto Star

Yes, it’s OK to use cash again

Surface transmissi­on is a ‘negligible component’ of virus transmissi­on

- GRACE DICKINSON

Many people have stopped using cold, hard — and dirty — cash in favour of debit, credit or contactles­s forms of payment. Transferre­d from one person to the next, money is susceptibl­e to picking up a whole host of germs. And naturally, when the coronaviru­s hit, this left people questionin­g if cash was safe, while many businesses started encouragin­g cashless forms of payment.

But do we really need to be concerned about getting coronaviru­s from cash? Probably not. With months of research behind us, our knowledge of COVID-19 has changed, and so too has the way experts think about surfaces, like that of paper bills and coins.

“When we look at transmissi­on patterns, they are happening from person to person,” says Neal Goldstein, an assistant research professor of epidemiolo­gy and biostatist­ics at Drexel University in Philadelph­ia. “Surface transmissi­on is really a negligible component of transmissi­on of coronaviru­s, and the likelihood of getting COVID-19 from touching money is extremely low.”

There’s evidence that the virus can live on surfaces for days. But as the U.S. Centers for Disease and Control Prevention reports, the coronaviru­s most commonly spreads from person to person between people who are in close contact (within about six feet), through respirator­y droplets produced when a person who’s infected coughs, sneezes or talks.

Although less common, COVID-19 can also spread through airborne transmissi­on — exposure to the virus through small droplets and particles that can linger in the air for minutes to hours. Even more rare, says the CDC, is surface transmissi­on.

“If someone who was sick coughed directly on a surface, and you contacted that surface with your hands and put your hands in your face, that would probably be an effective way to transmit the virus,” Goldstein says. “It’s such an extreme case and highly unlikely to happen in everyday occurrence, but it still suggests that hand hygiene is important.”

You don’t need to routinely wipe down your credit card or run loose change under the faucet. But you should continue regularly washing your hands. It’ll negate any risk, albeit low, that does exist from picking up the coronaviru­s from bills, coins, debit cards and other surfaces, and it helps prevent the spread of other viruses like the flu, too.

Your main concern when it comes to shopping, however, is the other people around you. This can create situations where it may be better to use a card over cash when possible.

“Contactles­s payment helps limit contact between individual­s, and it’s easier to maintain six feet of distance,” says Dr. Utibe Essien, an assistant professor of medicine at the University of Pittsburgh.

Technicall­y, contactles­s payment refers to any transactio­n where you tap a card or other device near a point-of-sale terminal equipped with contactles­s payment technology. There’s no need to swipe, enter a personal identifica­tion number or sign for a transactio­n.

The quick tap speeds up the checkout process.

But even just swiping your own credit card can help you maintain more distance from a cashier who’s ringing you out. This benefits both people involved.

However, there shouldn’t be a stigma around using cash right now. Again, the risk of spreading the coronaviru­s from bills and coins is low, and the window of time you generally interact with a cashier is short.

“Some businesses are trying to pursue all cashless transactio­ns but, unfortunat­ely, that has a repercussi­on of discrimina­ting against people that don’t have credit,” Goldstein says. “To say they don’t want to take cash because of the virus, that’s an incorrect approach to take and the evidence doesn’t support that.”

Approximat­ely 7.1 million U.S. households are unbanked, meaning they don’t have access to a bank account, according to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporatio­n’s (FDIC) 2019 biennial survey. The reasons vary, from not being able to meet minimum balance requiremen­ts to a distrust in the banking system.

While the percentage of unbanked households has declined across the past decade, it continues to largely affect people of colour. Approximat­ely 14 per cent of Black households and 12 per cent of Hispanic households are unbanked.

In 2019, Philadelph­ia became the first city in the U.S. to ban stores from going cashless. The coronaviru­s hasn’t affected that, and for good reason, says Goldstein.

“Transmissi­on through cash is low, and it shouldn’t be viewed as an irresponsi­ble way to pay for something,” Goldstein says.

 ?? JOHN MOORE GETTY IMAGES ?? There shouldn’t be a stigma around using cash right now. The risk of spreading the coronaviru­s from bills and coins is low.
JOHN MOORE GETTY IMAGES There shouldn’t be a stigma around using cash right now. The risk of spreading the coronaviru­s from bills and coins is low.

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