Springfield News-Sun

Study shows how ventilatio­n can curb virus levels

- Emily Anthes

Opening a window could reduce the amount of coronaviru­s in a room by half, according to a new observa- tional study of infected college students in an isolation dormitory at the University of Oregon.

T he study, which was posted online, is small and has not yet been published in a scientific journal. But it provides real-world evidence for several important principles, demonstrat­ing that the virus spreads from infected people into the air in a room; that the more virus they are carrying, the more virus builds up indoors; and that both natural and mechanical ventilatio­n appear to reduce this environmen­tal viral load.

“Ventilatio­n is one of the most important mitigation strategies that we have at our disposal,” said Kevin Van Den Wymelenber­g, who led the research and directs the Institute for Health in the Built Environmen­t.

The researcher­s studied 35 University of Oregon stu- dents who tested positive for the coronaviru­s between January and May. All students subsequent­ly moved into sin- gle rooms in a COVID isolation dormitory for a 10-day isolation period.

The scientists placed petri dishes in each room and used an active air sampler to trap aerosols floating around the air. Severaltim­es a day, they also swabbed various surfaces in the room as well as students’ noses and mouths.

Then they used PCR, or polymerase chain reaction, testing to determine whether the virus was present in each sample and, if so, at what levels.

The data confirmed that there was a clear link between the amount of virus that students were carrying and the environmen­tal viral load. As the amount of virus in students’ noses and mouths decreased over their isolation period, so did the amount of airborne virus. “There was a significan­t correlatio­n between the nasal samples and the air samples in the room,” Van Den Wymelenber­g said.

The viral loads in the rooms were higher, on average, when the students were symptomati­c than when they were symptom-free, although the scientists stressed that even asymptomat­ic students emitted plenty of virus. Several self-reported symptoms, including coughing, were specifical­ly associated with higher environmen­tal viral loads.

The researcher­s also calculated the mechanical ventilatio­n rate for each room and asked students to report how often the windows were open. They found that viral loads were about twice as high, on average, in rooms that had the window closed more than half the time.

“Ve ntilation is really important, and I think we’re just starting to realize how important it is,” said Leslie Dietz, a study co-author and researcher at the University of Oregon.

The study had several limitation­s, including the fact that it included only young adults and that symptoms and window data were self-reported. The researcher­s also noted that they did not measure how much of the virus present in the room was viable, or capable of infecting other people.

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