Hyderabad (Telangana):People need not panic over new research findings that coronavirus is airborne as studies cited by a group of over 200 scientists only convey it can be 'at least temporarily' in air and does not mean the pathogen is flying all over and will infect everyone, an expert has said.
This meant people should wear a mask for a longer period and continue to take other precautions such as social distancing to keep off the virus, Director of the CSIR-Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology (CCMB) Rakesh Mishra said.
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The letter of 239 scientists to the World Health Organisation (WHO) saying there was evidence that the coronavirus is airborne was based on two research papers, he said.
"Those are good studies. Based on that, what is being communicated to the WHO is that the virus can be at least temporarily airborne, which means it can travel in droplets of smaller size less than five microns which will mean that it will be hanging in the air for longer than a bigger droplet which settles down in a few minutes," he said.
It meant, small droplets released when a person speaks or breathes would be in the air for some time.
Hence, people have to wear a mask for a longer period, even if a person has left (a room) or when they go to a place, as someone there may have been potentially infected, he said.
"But, at the moment, there will not be, as far as I see, any major change in guidelines except a few modifications like this and there is no particular need to be stressed or panic that the virus is flying all over the place and it will be infecting everyone," Mishra said.
According to a report in the New York Times, the 239 scientists from 32 nations have written to the WHO, saying there is evidence that coronavirus is airborne and even smaller particles can infect people, a significant departure from the UN health agency's claim so far that COVID-19 is spread primarily through coughs and sneezes.