Daily Sabah (Turkey)

In major U-turn, CDC admits coronaviru­s can spread through air

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>> U.S. CENTERS for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Monday said COVID-19 can spread through the virus lingering in the air, sometimes for hours, acknowledg­ing concerns widely voiced by public health experts about the airborne transmissi­on of the virus.

The CDC guidance comes weeks after the agency published – and then took down – a similar warning, sparking debate over how the virus spreads.

In Monday’s guidance, the CDC said there was evidence that people with COVID-19 possibly infected others who were more than 6 feet (about 2 meters) away, within enclosed spaces with poor ventilatio­n. Under such circumstan­ces, the CDC said scientists believe the amount of infectious smaller droplets and particles, or aerosols, produced by the people with COVID-19 becomes concentrat­ed enough to spread the virus.

The CDC has long warned of transmissi­on through small droplets that shoot through the air and generally fall to the ground, which resulted in the 6-feet social distancing rule. Aerosol droplets are much smaller and can remain suspended in the air, like smoke.

While the CDC stresses close-contact transmissi­on is more common than through air, a group of U.S. scientists warned in an unrelated open letter published in the medical journal Science on Monday that aerosols lingering in the air could be a major source of COVID-19 transmissi­on.

“The reality is the airborne transmissi­on is the main way that transmissi­on happens at close range with prolonged contact,” the researcher­s said in a press call. Viruses in aerosols can remain in the air for seconds to hours, travel more than 2 meters and accumulate in poorly ventilated indoor air, leading to super-spreading events, the researcher­s said.

Since individual­s with COVID-19 release thousands of virus-laden aerosols and far fewer droplets while breathing and talking, the scientists said the focus must be on protecting against airborne transmissi­on. They also said that public health officials should clearly differenti­ate between droplets ejected by coughing or sneezing and aerosols that can carry the virus to greater distances

Public health officials must highlight the importance of moving activities outdoors and improving indoor air, along with wearing a mask and social distancing, the letter said.

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