Abstract

The main form of COVID-19 transmission is via "oral-respiratory droplet contamination" (droplet: very small drop of liquid) produced when individuals talk, sneeze, or cough. In hospitals, health-care workers wear facemasks as a minimum medical "<i>droplet precaution</i>" to protect themselves. Due to the shortage of masks during the pandemic, priority is given to hospitals for their distribution. As a result, the availability/use of medical masks is discouraged for the public. However, for asymptomatic individuals, not wearing masks in public could easily cause the spread of COVID-19. The prevention of "environmental droplet contamination" (EnvDC) from coughing/sneezing/speech is fundamental to reducing transmission. As an immediate solution to promote "<b>public droplet safety</b>," we assessed household textiles to quantify their potential as effective environmental droplet barriers (EDBs). The synchronized implementation of a universal "community droplet reduction solution" is discussed as a model against COVID-19. Using a bacterial-suspension spray simulation model of droplet ejection (mimicking a sneeze), we quantified the extent by which widely available clothing fabrics reduce the dispersion of droplets onto surfaces within 1.8 m, the minimum distance recommended for COVID-19 "social distancing." All textiles reduced the number of droplets reaching surfaces, restricting their dispersion to <30 cm, when used as single layers. When used as double-layers, textiles were as effective as medical mask/surgical-cloth materials, reducing droplet dispersion to <10 cm, and the area of circumferential contamination to ~0.3%. The synchronized implementation of EDBs as a "community droplet reduction solution" (i.e., face covers/scarfs/masks and surface covers) will reduce COVID-19 EnvDC and thus the risk of transmitting/acquiring COVID-19.

Keywords

Economic shortageCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Dispersion (optics)Materials sciencePandemicReduction (mathematics)Transmission (telecommunications)Environmental scienceMedicineComputer sciencePhysicsOpticsMathematicsTelecommunications

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Publication Info

Year
2020
Type
article
Volume
7
Pages
260-260
Citations
63
Access
Closed

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Alexander Rodriguez‐Palacios, Fabio Cominelli, Abigail Basson et al. (2020). Textile Masks and Surface Covers—A Spray Simulation Method and a “Universal Droplet Reduction Model” Against Respiratory Pandemics. Frontiers in Medicine , 7 , 260-260. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2020.00260

Identifiers

DOI
10.3389/fmed.2020.00260