Pandemic exposes scientific rift over proving when germs are airborne
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[July 11, 2020]
By Julie Steenhuysen
CHICAGO (Reuters) - The coronavirus
pandemic has exposed a clash among medical experts over disease
transmission that stretches back nearly a century - to the very origins
of germ theory.
The Geneva-based World Health Organization acknowledged this week that
the novel coronavirus can spread through tiny droplets floating in the
air, a nod to more than 200 experts in aerosol science who publicly
complained that the U.N. agency had failed to warn the public about this
risk.
Yet the WHO still insists on more definitive proof that the novel
coronavirus, which causes the respiratory disease COVID-19, can be
transmitted through the air, a trait that would put it on par with
measles and tuberculosis and require even more stringent measures to
contain its spread.
"WHO's slow motion on this issue is unfortunately slowing the control of
the pandemic," said Jose Jimenez, a University of Colorado chemist who
signed the public letter urging the agency to change its guidance.
Jimenez and other experts in aerosol transmission have said the WHO is
holding too dearly to the notion that germs are spread primarily though
contact with a contaminated person or object. That idea was a foundation
of modern medicine, and explicitly rejected the obsolete miasma theory
that originated in the Middle Ages postulating that poisonous,
foul-smelling vapors made up of decaying matter caused diseases such as
cholera and the Black Death.
"It's part of the culture of medicine from the early 20th century. To
accept something was airborne requires this very high level of proof,"
said Dr. Donald Milton, a University of Maryland aerobiologist and a
lead author of the open letter.
Such proof could involve studies in which laboratory animals become
sickened by exposure to the virus in the air, or studies showing viable
virus particles in air samples - a level of proof not required for other
modes of transmission such as contact with contaminated surfaces, the
letter's signatories said.
For the WHO, such proof is necessary as it advises countries of every
income and resource level to take more drastic measures against a
pandemic that has killed more than 550,000 people globally, with more
than 12 million confirmed infections.
For example, hospitals would have to provide more healthcare personnel
with heavy-duty N95 respiratory masks - personal protective gear already
in short supply - and businesses and schools would need to make
improvements to ventilation systems and require wearing masks indoors at
all times.
"It would affect our entire way of life. And that's why it's a very
important question," said Dr. John Conly, a University of Calgary
infectious disease expert who is part of the WHO's group of experts
advising on coronavirus guidelines.
Conly said that so far the studies have not shown viable virus particles
floating in the air.
"In my mind, I want to see evidence in those fine mists," Conly said.
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A French doctor, wearing a protective suit and a face mask, holds a
test tube after administering a nasal swab to a patient at a testing
site for coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Cambrai, following the
outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in France, July 9,
2020. REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol
HOW FAR CAN A DROPLET TRAVEL?
The WHO's latest guidance document, released on Thursday, called for
more research on coronavirus aerosol transmission, which it said
"has not been demonstrated."
The agency also repeated a firm cutoff on the size of infectious
droplets expelled in coughing and sneezing, noting that most larger
droplets are unlikely to travel beyond one meter (3.3 feet) - the
basis for their one-meter social distancing guidelines. Milton and
others have said larger particles have been shown to spread much
farther.
Conly and others maintain that if the virus were truly airborne like
measles, there would already be many more cases.
"Would we not be seeing, like, literally billions of cases globally?
That's not the case," Conly said.
WHO spokeswoman Dr. Margaret Harris rejected the claim by critics
that the agency is biased against the idea of aerosol transmission,
saying it recognized the possibility of airborne transmission during
medical procedures from early on in the pandemic.
Harris said it is "quite possible" that aerosolization is a factor
in some so-called super-spreading events in which one infected
person infects many others in close quarters. Many of these events
have occurred in places such as nightclubs where people are packed
together and are not likely to be careful about protecting
themselves or others from infection.
"Most super-spreading events have occurred in indoor places with
poor ventilation, with crowding, where it's very difficult for
people to socially distance," Harris said.
That is why, Harris said, the agency has called for urgent studies
to figure out "what really happened in these clusters and what were
the big factors."
(This story is refiled to include dropped word "the" in paragraph
17)
(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen; additional reporting by Stephanie
Nebehey in Geneva and Alistar Smout in London; Editing by Michele
Gershberg, Will Dunham and Sonya Hepinstall)
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