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  3. A room full of flu patients and no one got sick

A room full of flu patients and no one got sick

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  • sgaS This user is from outside of this forum
    sgaS This user is from outside of this forum
    sga
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    TL;DR - factors that could have potentially resulted in this is - less coughing by infected patients, good ventilation, volunteer adults which were healthy were mostly middle aged which is less likely to be infected. We need to do more trials to understand how seasonal flus work.

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    A room full of flu patients and no one got sick

    In a striking real-world experiment, flu patients spent days indoors with healthy volunteers, but the virus never spread. Researchers found that limited coughing and well-mixed indoor air kept virus levels low, even with close contact. Age may have helped too, since middle-aged adults are less likely to catch the flu than younger people. The results highlight ventilation, air movement, and masks as key defenses against infection.

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    ScienceDaily (www.sciencedaily.com)

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    • sgaS sga

      TL;DR - factors that could have potentially resulted in this is - less coughing by infected patients, good ventilation, volunteer adults which were healthy were mostly middle aged which is less likely to be infected. We need to do more trials to understand how seasonal flus work.

      Link Preview Image
      A room full of flu patients and no one got sick

      In a striking real-world experiment, flu patients spent days indoors with healthy volunteers, but the virus never spread. Researchers found that limited coughing and well-mixed indoor air kept virus levels low, even with close contact. Age may have helped too, since middle-aged adults are less likely to catch the flu than younger people. The results highlight ventilation, air movement, and masks as key defenses against infection.

      favicon

      ScienceDaily (www.sciencedaily.com)

      R This user is from outside of this forum
      R This user is from outside of this forum
      reddig33@lemmy.world
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      “Good ventilation” seems to be a forgotten art in US architecture.

      In Europe, they were opening the windows in schools during the COVID pandemic to help cut down on transmission. Can’t do that in the US because modern school building windows don’t open (if the schoolroom even has windows). Same for modern office buildings.

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