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       lite.cnn.com - on gopher - inofficial
       
       
       ARTICLE VIEW: 
       
       WHO clarifies what counts as a pathogen that can spread through the air
       
       By Jacqueline Howard, CNN
       
       Updated: 
       
       5:43 PM EDT, Thu April 18, 2024
       
       Source: CNN
       
       The World Health Organization is opening up the definition of airborne
       pathogens – such as Covid-19, influenza and measles – to include
       when respiratory droplets spread through the air and when they land on
       a person, regardless of the size of the droplet.
       
       The new report aims to cut down on the confusion around how to
       “describe the transmission of pathogens through the air that can
       potentially cause infection in humans,” .
       
       The phrase “transmission through the air” can be used to describe
       when infectious respiratory particles become airborne and spread, and
       the subcategories of “airborne transmission” and “direct
       deposition” can both fall under this blanket phrase, according to a
       published Thursday and developed in consultation with hundreds of
       scientists under a WHO Technical Consultation Group.
       
       “Airborne transmission” refers to when infectious respiratory
       particles expel into the air, such as from coughing or sneezing, and
       enter the respiratory tract of another person who inhales them,
       according to WHO. The subcategory “direct deposition” refers to
       when infectious respiratory particles expel into the air and directly
       land on another person’s mouth, nose or eyes, potentially causing
       infection.
       
       Those descriptors can involve particles “on a spectrum of sizes”
       that may expel over both short and long distances, according to WHO.
       That means there is no threshold or cut-off of particle size when using
       the updated terminology.
       
       “This report is important because it will enable better, clearer
       communication with the public about transmission of pathogens and how
       to reduce the risk of transmission,” Linsey Marr, an aerosol
       scientist and professor at Virginia Tech, who is a member of the
       consultation group behind the new report, said in an email Thursday.
       
       “Prior to this, a flawed understanding of airborne transmission of
       infectious diseases caused a lot of miscommunication about how Covid-19
       was transmitted and how people could best protect themselves. For
       example, wiping down groceries was not a good use of our time,” Marr
       said. “Public health agencies were hesitant to use the word
       ‘airborne’ because of differences in understanding among experts
       about what it meant. I hope that this report will allow public health
       communicators to use the word ‘airborne’ because this word is the
       simplest and clearest way to explain to the average person how a
       disease might be transmitted.”
       
       The WHO report said that the new terminology for airborne pathogens is
       consistent with how other diseases may be described, such as
       “waterborne” or “bloodborne.”
       
       “The descriptors included in this document should be seen as a
       starting point for further evidence review, urgent and detailed
       discussions and, multidisciplinary research with associated funding,”
       according to the report.
       
       The terminology in the new report can help scientists from across
       disciplines find agreement and clarity in describing airborne
       pathogens, Jeremy Farrar, WHO chief scientist, .
       
       “What this document does is bring the disciplines together and get
       common agreement. When I say ‘aerosol’, when I say ‘through the
       air’, it doesn’t matter whether I’m an engineer, a clinician, a
       nurse, a public health person. We know we mean the same thing,”
       Farrar said. “This actually covers many, many respiratory infections
       that go through the air. And that is also, I think, historic.”
       
       The need for such consensus was evident at the peak of the Covid-19
       pandemic.
       
       ‘There were many failures’
       
       During the pandemic, various terms were used in different ways to
       describe how the coronavirus could spread, causing much confusion –
       terms like airborne, airborne transmission or aerosol transmission.
       
       “We could all see that the different disciplines were describing
       things in different ways. People from all of those scientific expertise
       were using different languages, and therefore they were in some ways
       talking past each other rather than working together,” Farrar said.
       
       Around that same time, a to be more forthcoming about the likelihood
       that people can catch the virus .
       
       If the new WHO report had been in place before the Covid-19 pandemic,
       “public health officials might have described transmission as
       ‘airborne’ and recommended high-quality masks immediately,
       emphasized the importance of good ventilation indoors, and reduced the
       emphasis on distancing and hand-washing,” Marr said.
       
       The new report addresses a problem that Dr. Jessica Justman, professor
       of medicine in epidemiology and infectious disease expert at Columbia
       University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons, said she puzzled
       over when Covid-19 first emerged – whether coronavirus aerosols
       versus droplets were more important in transmission.
       
       “Respiratory particles exist in a wide continuum of sizes yet for
       decades, we used a cut-off of 5-10 microns, below which particles were
       considered aerosol and above which they were considered droplets,”
       Justman, who was not involved in the new WHO report, said in an email
       Thursday. “This use of a cut-off size never seemed logical to me and
       this report recommends we no longer use a cut-off size and instead
       suggests we view it as the continuum that it is.”
       
       The new report “is an improvement,” as it somewhat clarifies the
       terminology that was used for many years to describe airborne
       transmission involving larger and smaller particles, Stephen S. Morse,
       professor of epidemiology at Columbia University Mailman School of
       Public Health, said in an email Thursday.
       
       With the Covid-19 virus, “some agencies and scientists erroneously
       believed the spread was only by droplets, which don’t travel as far
       as the smaller particles. It took some time to recognize that both can
       enable transmission. This is probably true of most, probably all,
       respiratory viruses, although the specifics might vary,” said Morse,
       who was not involved in the new WHO report.
       
       “There were many failures in dealing with the pandemic, it would have
       been useful to have greater clarity but I don’t think it would have
       made a great difference overall,” he said. “It would have helped
       people to better protect themselves, but we didn’t have appropriate
       personal protective equipment available anyway.”
       
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