The Independent

More Sage advice – plastic safety screens aren’t so safe

- JANE DALTON

Plastic screens could increase the risks of catching Covid in some circumstan­ces, the government has been warned.

Experts say screens may block or change airflow patterns or, in some cases, create areas of poor air circulatio­n.

However, screens and barriers are likely to cut the risk of people being exposed to larger aerosols and droplets from other people’s breath when they are face-to-face and within two metres of each other, ministers have been told.

The Environmen­tal Modelling Group, a panel of 16 professors, doctors and health experts who are part of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencie­s (Sage), looked at scientific evidence on barriers in reducing the spread of the coronaviru­s to advise the government.

The group said in a report: “There is some epidemiolo­gical and mechanisti­c evidence that suggests that screens could increase risks of aerosol transmissi­on due to blocking/changing airflow patterns or creating zones of poor air circulatio­n behind screens. This effect will depend on the local airflow patterns.”

It said it had “medium” confidence in this idea, adding: “Unless they are designed to work with the airflow, screens are unlikely to reduce exposure to virus in smaller aerosols as they can easily pass around a screen with the airflow in a short period of time.”

But the experts said they had “high” confidence that screens and barriers benefited people who were close together.

Earlier this year, a Whitehall document advised ministers against the use of screens, arguing that the partitions could exacerbate transmissi­on by blocking the airflow that helps to disperse aerosols.

The Sage group said screens could also reduce surface contaminat­ion in some settings, although evidence was limited.

But they also said screens were unlikely to directly reduce exposure to the virus from droplets or aerosols when people were more than two metres apart or where they were not faceto-face.

NHS guidance advises company bosses that screens or barriers help to separate people from each other.

Government advice on “freedom day”, when a raft of restrictio­ns were lifted nearly two weeks ago, also suggested using partitions to minimise contact from other people’s breath.

But some supermarke­ts have already taken screens down.

The effectiven­ess of screens will depend on factors such as the layout of the space, the ventilatio­n, the size and design of the screen and the interactio­ns that happen in the environmen­t, according to the new report.

“In some locations it is possible that screens or barriers could act as reminders to people to maintain social distance or help organisati­ons manage the layout in their environmen­ts,” it said.

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 ?? (AFP/Getty) ?? Experts at Sage query how we ll safety screens can protect us from Covid
(AFP/Getty) Experts at Sage query how we ll safety screens can protect us from Covid
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