Interesting article on in-flight COVID transmission
https://twitter.com/Jemma_Geoghegan/status/1346557476607549441

Passengers A and B were likely infected before the flight and passenger G infected after the flight at quarantine facility. Passengers C-F were presumed in-flight transmission, all within 2 rows of source case(s). https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/images/20-4714-F3.jpg
Key facts:
The plane's auxiliary power unit was disabled for 30 minutes during a refuelling stop - this controls ventilation/filtration
When running, planes have better ventilation/filtration than a hospital OR!




So if all the spread was within 2 rows, it must mean that droplets were at play, right? Wrong. Not unless Passenger A was doing some serious acrobatics in their seat while directing forceful sneezes in every direction.
The #COVIDisAirborne smoke analogy is far easier to imagine:
The #COVIDisAirborne smoke analogy is far easier to imagine:
Passenger A lights up a COVID cigarette during the flight. The excellent ventilation/filtration keeps the smoke at bay, perhaps the surrounding passengers get a whiff. During refuelling, the APU is disabled and the smoke starts to accumulate. Perhaps Passenger B joins in
