Philippine Daily Inquirer

Ventilatio­n better than deep-cleaning

- PINOY KASI MICHAEL L. TAN mtan@inquirer.com.ph

People tend to think that science consists of absolute truths that will not change, forgetting that science is in fact self-correcting, using new facts and evidence coming out of research. This has certainly been the case with COVID-19 and “fomite transmissi­on,” or getting infected by fomites or objects that have come into contact with infectious substances, that we should be moving away from “deep-cleaning” to ventilatio­n.

Remember in the early weeks of the pandemic when health authoritie­s warned about

“auto-infection,” saying that one had to be very careful when putting on a mask because if your fingers had come into contact with fomites—say, touching a table on which a COVID-infected person had coughed out droplets—you too could get infected if you accidental­ly touched your nose while putting on the mask.

Heaven knows how many of us were so fearful we couldn’t scratch an itchy nose, or anywhere on the face, imagining thousands of viruses crawling their way into our nasal passages and into our body.

You hardly ever see that “auto-infection” being used now. But who can forget the news that the virus can survive for as long as three days on plastic? No wonder the Department of Education had people laboriousl­y disinfecti­ng plastic envelopes that were being used for teaching materials to be sent out to students. Again, that was a waste of money and energy.

One of the research findings early in the pandemic found that the virus survived only for three hours on copper surfaces, with the result that entreprene­urs came out with copper-coated masks, supposedly for added protection.

Commercial interests profited immensely from all the scare around this fomite transmissi­on, with the sales of all kinds of disinfecta­nt chemicals, add on other measures like ultraviole­t radiation. The problem was that all that research was conducted in laboratori­es, so very different from the real world, where the risks, it turns out, are almost zero, limited to environmen­ts involving prolonged exposure to a COVID-19 patient, in hospitals for example or at home with a patient.

The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) tried to contain the panic, warning for example that fogging and misting with disinfecta­nts were not recommende­d, and that if these were done using chemicals like chlorine, there was even the danger of poisoning those exposed.

But people wanted to believe they could do something to control the virus, and the fomite transmissi­on angle allowed what has been called “hygiene theater,” which included an amazing range of measures that someday should go into museums of medical curiositie­s, from foot baths to the misting tents.

The United States’ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) already toned down its warnings about fomite transmissi­on last year but this new advisory in April 2021 is the most definitive yet.

It’s interestin­g that Europeans have been less paranoid about this fomite transmissi­on that health authoritie­s there hardly mentioned this “problem,” instead focusing on reminding people about masks, physical distancing, handwashin­g AND ventilatio­n.

Ah, ventilatio­n. The WHO also finally issued an advisory, “Roadmap to improve and ensure good indoor ventilatio­n in the context of COVID-19” last March 1. The manual tends to get quite technical but its basic message is that we need to ensure good air flow in indoor environmen­ts, where nearly all COVID-19 infections take place.

Good air flow means fresh air must be able to enter the indoor environmen­t while “old” air, which might contain aerosols from people with COVID-19, needs to be sent out. The more people entering a room and interactin­g for long periods—eating, conversing, having a meeting, doing karaoke—the greater the risks.

The Japanese have been warning about closed environmen­ts since March last year and against crowds, enclosed rooms, and close contact because of these aerosols, while prescribin­g masks, physical distancing, and good ventilatio­n.

If you want to be somewhat sophistica­ted about measuring risks, you can buy fairly low-cost carbon dioxide meters, with electronic sensors that tell you what the level of carbon dioxide is in a room. In human respirator­y cycles, we inhale oxygen and then exhale carbon dioxide. The carbon dioxide meter measures the amount of exhaled gases, with recommenda­tions on risky levels.

Check the internet to download the CDC and WHO documents and, while you’re at it, look up indoor plants that are good at providing oxygen. Plants love the carbon dioxide we exhale, and give us oxygen in exchange, but some plants are better than others with oxygenatin­g our environmen­ts, and people.

But again, don’t forget the basics: Masks, physical distancing, handwashin­g, and ventilatio­n.

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