We can pick up the Covid-19 by touching surfaces contaminated with the new corona virus, but it is only just becoming clear how long the virus can survive outside the human body.
Covid-19
has spread, so has our fear of surfaces. There are now some familiar scenes in
public places around the world – people trying to open doors with their elbows,
commuters studiously surfing their way through train journeys to avoid grabbing
a handle, office workers rubbing down their desks each morning. In the areas
worst hit by the new corona virus, teams of workers in protective clothing have
been dispatched to spray a fog of disinfectant in plazas, parks and public
streets. Cleaning regimes in offices, hospitals, shops and restaurants have
been increased. In some cities, well-meaning volunteers even venture out at
night to scrub the keypads of cash machines.
It is
worth noting that, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
touching a surface or object with the virus and then touching one's own
face "is not thought to be the main way the virus spreads". Even
so, the CDC, the World Health Organization and others health authorities, have
emphasized that both washing one's hands and cleaning and disinfecting
frequently touched surfaces daily are keyin preventing Covid-19's spread. So
although we still don't know exactly how many cases are being caused directly
by contaminated surfaces, experts advise exercising caution.
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One aspect that has been unclear is exactly how long Sars-Co-2,
the name of the virus that causes the disease Covid-19, can survive outside the
human body. Some studies on other corona viruses, including Sars and Mers, found
they can survive on metal, glass and plastic for as long as nine days,
unless they are properly disinfected. Some can even hang around for up to 28
days in low temperatures. Corona viruses are well known to be particularly resilient in
terms of where they can survive. And researchers are now beginning to
understand more about how this affects the spread of the new corona virus
Neeltje van Doremalen, a virologist at the US
National Institutes of Health (NIH), and her colleagues at the Rocky Mountain
Laboratories in Hamilton, Montana, have done some of the first tests of how
long Sars-CoV-2 can last for on different surfaces. Their study, which has
been published in the New England Journal of Medicine, shows that the
virus could survive in droplets for up to three hours after being coughed
out into the air. Fine droplets between 1-5 micrometers in size – about 30
times smaller than the width of a human hair – can remain airborne for
several hours in still air.
It means that the
virus circulating in unfiltered air conditioning systems will only persist for
a couple of hours at the most, especially as aerosol droplets tend
to settle on surfaces faster in disturbed air.
But the NIH study
found that the Sars-CoV-2 virus survives for longer on cardboard – up to 24
hours – and up to 2-3 days on plastic and stainless-steel surfaces.
The findings
suggest the virus might last this long on door handles, plastic-coated or
laminated worktops and other hard surfaces. The researchers did find, however,
that copper surfaces tended to kill the virus in about four hours.
But there is a
speedier option: research has shown that corona viruses can be inactivated
within a minute by disinfecting surfaces with 62-71% alcohol, or 0.5%
hydrogen peroxide bleach or household bleach containing 0.1% sodium
hypochlorite. Higher temperatures and humidity also tend to result
in other corona viruses dying quicker, although research has shown that a
related corona virus that causes Sars could be killed by temperatures above
56°C or 132°F(hotter than even a bath scalding enough to cause injury) at a
rate of about 10,000 viral particles every 15 minutes.
The US
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has now published a list of
disinfectants and active ingredients that can be used against the
Sars-CoV-2 virus.Ultraviolet light can also be used to disinfect some
surfaces, but is not currently recommended for use on human skin.
Although there is no data on how many virus particles will be in
a single droplet coughed up by an infected person, research on the flu virus
suggests smaller droplets can contain many tens of thousands of
copies of the influenza virus. However, this can vary depending on the
virus itself, where in the respiratory tract it is found and at what stage in
the infection the person is.
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