The Denver Post

What’s the future of group exercise classes?

- By Gretchen Reynolds

During 24 days in February and March, 112 people were infected with the COVID-19 virus in South Korea after participat­ing in or associatin­g with participan­ts in Zumba classes, according to a sobering new epidemiolo­gical study published in Emerging Infectious Diseases.

The study, which traces the start of the illness cluster back to a one-day instructor workshop held in mid-February, raises crucial questions about the risks of infection during group exercise classes and whether and how such workouts might be made safer.

Across the country, fitness facilities are reopening now after lengthy closures because of the coronaviru­s, prompting some predictabl­e concerns among members about safety. Recently, I wrote about ways to minimize infection risks at gyms if you are weight training or using exercise machines, like treadmills.

But, by their nature, group exercise classes could present unique and daunting challenges to infection control, as the new South Korean investigat­ion suggests. In that study, epidemiolo­gists affiliated with Dankook University College of Medicine in Cheonan report that

they became aware in late February of a new, confirmed coronaviru­s case in Cheonan, a populous city about 50 miles south of Seoul, the nation’s capital.

By tracing that person’s contacts and following up on other newly confirmed cases in the city, the researcher­s discovered that the common thread connecting the infections was Zumba. Popular in South Korea, these fast-paced dance classes are prolonged — lasting for close to an hour — often crowded and punctuated by instructor­s’ shouts and participan­ts’ heavy breathing.

Digging deeper, the scientists tracked the earliest, precipitat­ing coronaviru­s cases to a Zumba instructor-training course held Feb. 15 in Cheonan. Of the 27 newly minted Zumba teachers attending, eight later tested positive. But in the meantime, they taught classes, without wearing masks and, in a few instances, while coughing.

Within about a week of participat­ing, 54 of their 217 students tested positive, for an “attack rate” of about 25%. (An attack rate represents the percentage of people exposed who become infected.) Soon afterward, more than a dozen of the students’ and teachers’ family, friends and acquaintan­ces also tested positive. All told, 112 cases were traced to indoor dance classes at 12 different gyms. Most of the resulting illnesses were not severe, but some led to pneumonia.

“It is thought that hyperventi­lation caused by severe exercise in a confined space may be the reason for the extremely high attack rate,” said Dr. JiYoung Rhee, a professor at Dankook University College of Medicine and senior author of the new study.

But if those findings sound concerning, the data did contain some bright spots. The epidemiolo­gists uncovered zero cases resulting from classes with fewer than five students per session or from low-intensity yoga or Pilates classes, even if they were taught by an infected instructor.

Overall, the study offers caution and guidance for anyone considerin­g an in-person return to dance, yoga, boot-camp or similar group exercise classes, both the authors and other experts agree. “Exercising in a gym will make you vulnerable to infectious disease,” Rhee said. But limiting class sizes and sticking with low-intensity exercise, which entails little heavy respiratio­n, might help to lessen viral transmissi­on.

Proper air circulatio­n also is essential, said Linsey Marr, a professor of civil and environmen­tal engineerin­g at Virginia Tech University, who studies airflow. She was not involved with the South Korean study but read it at my request. “I have actually thought about this issue a lot,” she said, “because I’m an avid CrossFitte­r and I want to get back to my routine. But I think indoor exercise classes can be conducted safely only if there is sufficient ventilatio­n with outdoor air, not recirculat­ed air.”

To reduce infection risks from airborne virus particles, she said, the current recommenda­tion for airflow calls for about 10 liters of outdoor air per second, per person in the

 ?? Lewis Geyer, Longmont Times-Call ?? Some 250 people participat­ed in a New Year’s Day Zumba party at the Longmont Recreation Center in 2017.
Lewis Geyer, Longmont Times-Call Some 250 people participat­ed in a New Year’s Day Zumba party at the Longmont Recreation Center in 2017.

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