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It’s taken 100 scientists 2 years to rename airborne viruses after Covid-19 mistakes

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BY JASON GALE

IRBORNE viruses will be called “pathogens that transmit through the air” under new terminolog­y the World Health Organizati­on hopes will end a scientific rift that hampered the early response to Covid-19.

After two years of consultati­ons involving over 100 scientists, a Who-led working group agreed to the term to describe diseases caused by infectious particles that typically multiply in the respirator­y tract and spread from the nose and throat of an infected person while they breathe, speak, sing, cough or sneeze.

While the discussion may seem trivial, it carries important economic and public health consequenc­es. How pathogens transmit determines what control measures are most effective at preventing their spread. As Covid erupted in early 2020, the WHO maintained for months that the fastspread­ing virus wasn’t airborne—delaying recommenda­tions for maskwearin­g and indoor ventilatio­n, and frustratin­g aerosol scientists who believe the misguided advice cost lives.

“Science changes,” Jeremy Farrar, who took over as chief scientist at the Geneva-based agency about a year ago, said in an interview. “All you can do honorably is to share what you think is the best available

evidence at that time.”

Evidence gathered in the ensuing four years has prompted worldwide government action to mitigate airborne diseases. The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last month detailed steps that people can take to reduce the number of respirator­y particles circulatin­g indoors, a year after the White House set a “clean air in buildings” challenge. The WHO itself released in March an 83-page manual that can be used to assess the risk of airborne Covid spread.

Some researcher­s have also proposed mandating indoor air quality standards for public buildings. Still, tackling airborne infections remains controvers­ial. The lengthy consultati­on process around the WHO’S new terminolog­y was “extremely complex and sensitive,” according to the working group’s report, released Thursday.

Global implicatio­ns

THE report reaches consensus on the term “infectious respirator­y particles,” moves away from a strict dichotomy of particle sizes, and accepts that smaller infectious respirator­y particles can be transmitte­d at both short and longer ranges.

Their potential consequenc­es, however, were a sticking point for some of the report’s authors. Infections capable of spreading long distances through the air on tiny respirator­y particles may call for rigorous and expensive infection control measures, such as the wearing of particulat­e-filtering respirator masks and specialize­d hospital rooms in health-care settings.

“This would have legal, logistic, operationa­l and financial consequenc­es that have global implicatio­ns with regards to equity and access,” the report added.

The terminolog­y sets common language that engineers, physicists, clinicians, and epidemiolo­gists will be able to apply in determinin­g the broad implicatio­ns of airborne particles, along with the effectiven­ess of countermea­sures like face masks and respirator­s, Farrar said.

“In the first hours, days, and weeks of a new respirator­y pandemic, it’s issues like, ‘ do masks work?’ And, if masks do work, ‘what type of mask,’ which will have enormous impact on the ability to protect communitie­s and health-care workers,” he said.

Old teachings

IN March 2020, the WHO issued guidance for health workers caring for Covid patients asserting that the virus spread primarily through direct contact and respirator­y “droplets” measuring 5-10 micrometer­s in diameter. The determinat­ion—based on decades- old infection- control teachings—meant that facemasks were deemed an acceptable option during respirator shortages, unless the patient was undergoing a medical procedure likely to generate aerosols.

The WHO also recommende­d distancing of more than 1 meter— within which these droplets were thought to fall to the ground—along with hand-washing, surface cleaning and sneezing into elbows. With personal protective equipment in short supply, people were advised not to not wear masks unless they were sick or taking care of someone who was.

The new terminolog­y acknowledg­es that infectious respirator­y particles exist on a continuum spectrum of sizes, and recommends against applying definitive cut off points to distinguis­h smaller from larger particles. “That’s a positive step,” said physicist Lidia Morawska, a distinguis­hed professor in the school of earth and atmospheri­c sciences at Australia’s Queensland University of Technology, who worked on the WHO report. Bloomberg

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