Air travel is often depicted as a spreader of diseases around the world, given that it squeezes lots of people into a small space. However, a new study shows that you're not likely to get the flu from a passenger seated more than 1 meter, or 3.3 feet, away from you.
The study, published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, claims to be the first to rigorously test the spread of viruses — specifically influenza — that are transmitted via large droplets, such as when an infected person coughs or sneezes.
Researchers from Emory University, the Georgia Institute of Technology, and Boeing employed teams of observers in pairs, sitting every five rows down in economy class in single-aisle aircraft during 10 transcontinental flights in 2012 and 2013. These observers watched and recorded the movements of passengers during the flight using an iPad app.
SEE ALSO: 3 of 4 kids who've died from flu this year weren't vaccinated, say federal doctorsThe study used the movement of each passenger to simulate the spread of influenza virus from a passenger seated in the mid-cabin (seat 14C, to be exact), and an infectious crew member. The researchers developed a new model of the network of contacts passengers and crew members had with one another, as well as a simulation model of disease spread, to find out how many additional people would get sick while on typical flights that last between 4 and 5 hours.
The results were surprising. On average, an infectious passenger seated in the mid-cabin had the potential to infect an additional 0.7 additional people per flight.
However, if an infectious crew member chose not to stay home, and did not take medication to limit their coughing, then that infectious crew member would infect an additional 4.6 passengers per flight, the study found.
Via Giphy"Our model simulations yield that an infected flight attendant could infect several passengers, and we quantify this. This provides additional support for the policy of preventing crew members from working when sick," said study lead author Vicki Stover Hertzberg, of Emory University.
The study found that people sitting in window seats who did not get up to go use the restroom or check the overhead bin had far less exposure to infectious passengers than people sitting at the aisle, or people who spent time in line waiting for the restroom at the back of the cabin, for example. So, come next flu season, you might want to pick a window seat and avoid getting up.
"If they select the window seat to minimize those exposures, they also need to stay there (i.e., don’t move). When they move, they increase their exposures," Hertzberg said.
The study has some significant limitations. It does not apply to illnesses transmitted via smaller particles known as aerosols, which include tuberculosis, measles, and other dangerous pathogens. "These tiny particles need not fall within a meter of the infected passenger," Hertzberg said. "They can stay suspended in the cabin air for long periods of time, be taken up by air recirculation systems, etc."
The study also didn't quantify the risk of getting sick from viruses located on air cabin surfaces, such as an armrest or seatbelt. And it doesn’t apply to twin-aisle, larger aircraft used on long-haul flights, or quick shuttle flights, such as from Boston to Washington, D.C.
The bottom line, though, said study co-author Howard Weiss, of Georgia Tech, is that "If you practice good hand hygiene, keep your hands away from your face, and if you are seated further away than a meter from an infected passenger, you are unlikely to get infected by influenza during an 4 to 5 hour flight."
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
It's sick flight crews you need to worry about, not passengers: study-声闻过情网
sitemap
文章
34556
浏览
31
获赞
488
Stephen King has some golden Thanksgiving advice for avoiding political arguments
It's almost an unwritten rule of Thanksgiving – or any family holiday event, for that matter &Use Gmail Filters to Automate your Inbox
One of the most powerful tools Gmail provides is its filtering system. Strangely, it seems that fewWhat is Vcore and How Does It Help with Overclocking?
Why it matters:Vcore, or core voltage, is the voltage that is supplied to power your CPU. The amountBillions of snow crabs disappeared, and scientists have a good clue why
While counting snow crabs at sea in 2021, fisheries biologist Erin Fedewa saw that something was deeYou can now watch YouTube with iPhone's Picture in Picture mode without a premium account
This is a pleasant surprise: YouTube's mobile website now allows Picture in Picture mode on an iPhonNASA Mars Curiosity rover spots striking clouds in Martian sunsets
A Mars rover has watched some spectacular sunsets recently, with sightings of iridescent, featherlikPrivate astronauts dock and then crowd onto the space station
The largest orbiting laboratory in the sky just got a lot more crowded. The Axiom Space mission, theLG Gram 17
SAVE $800: On Sept. 20, you can score an LG Gram 17-inch laptop (12th Gen Intel Core i7, 16GB RAM, 1Zoom adds two
Many of us have come to rely on Zoom video calls as a way of interacting with friends and family safPrivate astronauts dock and then crowd onto the space station
The largest orbiting laboratory in the sky just got a lot more crowded. The Axiom Space mission, theThreads is now available on desktop for some users
As of today, Threads, Instagram's Twitter alternative, is available as a logged-in web experience &mS3 Graphics: Gone But Not Forgotten
These days, it's rare to see a new hardware company break ground in the world of PCs. However, 30 yeWhy GMC's new electric Hummer is a bigger deal than Tesla's Cybertruck
There were no broken windows, like the "bulletproof" ones at Tesla's Cybertruck event last year thatCarina Nebula images from James Webb and Hubble telescopes paint stunning cosmic views
A star nursery discovered over 250 years ago will teach astronomers new things about how stars comeCarina Nebula images from James Webb and Hubble telescopes paint stunning cosmic views
A star nursery discovered over 250 years ago will teach astronomers new things about how stars come