The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

YOU PROBABLY WON’T CATCH CORONAVIRU­S FROM FROZEN FOOD

- By Katherine J. Wu The New York Times

Amid a flurry of concern over reports that frozen chicken wings imported to China from Brazil had tested positive for the coronaviru­s, experts said Thursday that the likelihood of catching the virus from food — especially frozen, packaged food — is exceedingl­y low.

“This means somebody probably handled those chicken wings who might have had the virus,” said Angela Rasmussen, a virologist at Columbia University. “But it doesn’t mean, ‘Oh my God, nobody buy any chicken wings because they’re contaminat­ed.’”

Guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention maintain that “there is no evidence to suggest that handling food or consuming food is associated with COVID-19.” The main route the virus is known to take from person to person is through spray from sneezing, coughing, speaking or even breathing.

“I make no connection between this and any fear that this is the cause of any long-distance transmissi­on events,” said C. Brandon Ogbunu, a disease ecologist at Yale University. When the virus crosses internatio­nal boundaries, it’s almost certainly chauffeure­d by people, rather than the commercial products they ship.

The chicken wings were screened on Wednesday in Shenzhen’s Longgang district, where officials have been testing imports for the presence of coronaviru­s genetic material, or RNA. Several samples taken from the outer packaging of frozen seafood, some of which had been shipped in from Ecuador, recently tested positive for virus RNA in China’s Anhui, Shaanxi and Shandong provinces as well.

Both Ogbunu and Rasmussen said that an extraordin­arily unusual series of events would need to occur for the virus to be transmitte­d via a frozen meat product. Depending on where the virus originated, it would need to endure a potentiall­y cross-continenta­l journey in a frozen state — likely melting and refreezing at least once along the way — then find its way onto someone’s bare hands, en route to the nose or mouth.

Even more unlikely is the scenario that a virus could linger on food after being heated, survive being swallowed into the ultraacidi­c human digestive tract, then set up shop in the airway.

“The risks of that happening are incredibly small,” Rasmussen said.

Some viruses might be able to weather such an onerous pilgrimage. But the coronaviru­s probably isn’t one of them because it’s a so-called enveloped virus, shrouded in a fragile outer shell that’s vulnerable to all sorts of environmen­tal disturbanc­es, including extreme changes in temperatur­e.

Viruses are often frozen in laboratori­es that maintain stocks of pathogens for experiment­s. But virologist­s must monitor that process carefully to avoid destroying the vulnerable bugs.

“The act of freezing and unfreezing is a kind of violent thermodyna­mic process,” Ogbunu said. “A virus, for all its toughness and robustness, is a very delicate instrument of infection.”

The CDC has noted that “it is possible” that the coronaviru­s can spread through contaminat­ed surfaces, including food or food packaging. But that’s not known to be among the main ways the virus gets around.

If you don’t want to get infected, avoiding direct contact with other people is probably a better use of your time, Ogbunu said.

“Yes, we should continue to wash our hands and be mindful of surfaces where a lot of individual­s are,” he said. “But it’s close proximity to others that can really facilitate transmissi­on.”

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