Coronavirus: How safe is it to get on a plane?
By Theo
Leggett & Tim Bowler
BBC News
2 June 2020
Many
airlines are planning to resume flying, but they first need to reduce the risks
of Covid-19
One of the
consequences of the coronavirus pandemic has been the massive reduction in air
travel in recent months, with daily flights down some 80% since the start of
the year.
Some
airlines have grounded their entire fleets, while others have been focusing on
cargo flights, in an effort to help keep supply chains functioning and make
what money they can.
Now,
however, many carriers are making plans to get back in the air.
Ryanair,
for example, says it plans to reintroduce 40% of its schedule from July,
EasyJet is starting a limited service this month and hopes to resume flights on
75% of its route network by the end of August, while Air France KLM and
Lufthansa will begin flying very limited schedules by the end of June.
Hungarian carrier Wizz Air has already resumed flights.
In the UK,
the situation is complicated by the introduction of controversial quarantine
rules on 8 June - which will force passengers to isolate themselves for two
weeks after arriving in the country.
But can
passengers fly safely, or will they be at risk of infection?
The
Covid-19 coronavirus is still relatively new, so accurate data on how it can
spread between aircraft passengers is in short supply. But previous studies
have looked at the spread of other respiratory illnesses.
Based on
the available information, US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
generally tries to track down people sitting in the two rows in front and the
two rows behind passengers found to have serious infections.
A 2018
study by researchers from Emory University in Atlanta attempted to model how
passengers and crew moved about an aircraft, and how that might affect the
transmission of infectious diseases.
"A
droplet-mediated respiratory infectious disease is unlikely to be directly
transmitted beyond one metre from the infectious passenger. Thus, transmission
is limited to one row in front of or in back of an infectious passenger,"
the researchers concluded.
But
contrary to this, earlier research - led by the same academics - had shown that
in real life cases passengers with Sars or influenza actually appeared to have
infected a number of people well outside their immediate area.
Their
explanation was that some of those who became ill had become infected in the
airport, while embarking or disembarking from the plane, or from touching
contaminated surfaces, rather than by breathing in infected droplets.
The
simulations also indicated that, because cabin crew moved around the aircraft
and had numerous contacts with different passengers, they could generate
several new infections, and concluded "it is imperative that flight
attendants not fly when they are ill".
Meanwhile,
public health officials in Canada say they did not find any cases of further
infection after two passengers on a flight from Guangzhou to Toronto were found
to have Covid-19. The flight had 350 people on board, and lasted for 15 hours.
Airbus's
chief engineer Jean-Brice Dumont argues the air inside modern aircraft is
intrinsically very clean
Although
many people might think that sitting in a confined space for long periods would
inevitably spread infections, the chief engineer at aerospace giant Airbus
insists that is not the case.
Jean-Brice
Dumont argues that the way modern aircraft are designed means that the air is
intrinsically very clean. "Every two to three minutes, mathematically, all
the air is renewed," he says. "That means 20 to 30 times per hour,
the air around you is completely renewed."
Put simply,
air is collected from outside the aircraft, normally through the engine, and
mixed with recycled air from the cabin.
The
recycled air, which is reused in part to keep temperature and humidity at the
correct levels, is passed through HEPA (high-efficiency particulate air)
filters that are similar to those used in hospitals. The Covid-19 virus is
about 125 nanometres in diameter (a nanometre is a billionth of a metre) and is
within the particle-size range that HEPA filters capture - 10 nanometres and
above.
Mr Dumont
says: "HEPA filters have standards, and the standards we use in commercial
aviation are among the highest standards. They filter out 99.97% of
particulates (small particles) of the size of Covid-19."
The flow of
the air itself, he explains, is also designed to minimise infection risks.
"The
air flows vertically. It is blown from above your head and evacuated from
beneath your feet. That makes the level of propagation of anything in the air
quite limited. So a passenger from row one, for example, cannot contaminate
someone in row 20."
But is this
enough? This regular flow of air, from top to bottom, can be disrupted by
passengers leaving their seats or cabin crew moving up and down the aisles,
thus altering the path of any airborne particles.
And
crucially, while HEPA filters do work, they can't capture all Covid-19 droplets
or aerosols before you might breathe them in, says Dr Julian Tang, consultant
virologist at the Leicester Royal Infirmary and associate professor at
Leicester University. He is also one of the team behind a study, published this
month, looking at minimising the airborne transmission of Covid-19 in enclosed
spaces.
"Filtration
only works on mass airflows, most of the transmission during a plane journey
will be those short-range face-to-face conversations. Close range aerosol
transmission is what you have to be worried about on a plane, train or a bus -
this is the biggest risk."
And even if
you are further away, the risk is not eliminated, says Dr Tang. "How long
Covid-19 can remain airborne depends on a range of factors. It varies between
different people, it varies depending on the state of your infection, and you
can't say all the droplets will fall to the ground within two metres.
"Some smaller droplets can stay suspended and
travel up to 16 metres - and they all could be carrying the virus."
Dr Tang and
his fellow authors say there is accumulating evidence for the important role of
airborne transmission when it comes to infectious diseases such as Covid-19 or
Mers, Sars and influenza, something which they argue has been overlooked.
But Mr
Dumont believes that simple precautions, such as wearing masks, and coughing or
sneezing into an elbow will minimise risks. "I want to be precise on that.
We want people to wear masks," he says. This, he claims, combined with the
rapid replacement of air, should minimise exposure.
So, would
it also be a rational move to enforce social distancing on aircraft, for
example by blocking out middle seats - a move contemplated by some airlines,
but described by Ryanair's CEO Michael O'Leary as "idiotic"?
"We don't
think so," says Mr Dumont. "It doesn't add to the risk reduction, we
believe."
Virologist
Dr Tang disagrees: "The problem is that if you're sitting next to somebody
- 0.6 metres in economy, say - who's coughing and sneezing in that immediate
area, that aerosol will reach you before it has time to reach the filtration
system, get filtered and come back down again."
Meanwhile
the International Air Transport Association (Iata), which represents airlines,
has set out a detailed "biosecurity roadmap", which it is presenting
as a blueprint to governments for reopening the industry.
Much of
what it has to say focuses not on the flight itself, but on the time spent in
the airport - where large numbers of people could normally be expected to come
into contact with one another. It wants that time to be minimised as much as
possible.
As a
result, it is calling for:
restricted
access to terminal buildings
temperature
testing to be carried out at entry points
passengers
to provide health and contact information before arrival
passengers
to check in remotely and print out boarding cards and luggage tags at home
the use of
automated processes such as bag drops at the airport itself.
The actual
flight is considered to be relatively low risk - and according to Iata vice
president Nick Careem, "physical distancing on board is not
necessary".
The
emphasis, he says, should be on enhanced and frequent deep cleaning of the
cabin, as well as measures to avoid passengers congregating in specific areas.
That could include banning queues for the washrooms.
The key
message, Mr Careem says is that "there is no silver bullet, no single
measure that can prevent infection".
Dr Tang,
meanwhile, says he would fly with precautions. "If I get on a plane, I'll
be wearing a mask. It's not 100% but at least I'll have some
protection."


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