Can air purifiers really reduce your COVID risk"
When indoor air quality expert Jeffrey Siegel has a few select family members over for dinner these days there are a couple of extra guests in the room.
He adds a few strategically placed air purifiers near the dining table, one next to those who are at the highest risk of being infected with COVID?for example, kids, since they?re unvaccinated or partially vaccinated and attend school?and one near any immunocompromised family members in attendance.
?It?s one of several risk mitigation measures we use,? says Siegel, who holds joint appointments at the University of Toronto?s Dalla Lana School of Public Health and the Department of Physical and Environmental Sciences.
How an air purifier can help with COVID
At the beginning of the pandemic, we heard a lot about how it was important to wash our hands and surfaces to reduce the risk of transmission, but these days the focus has shifted to the air, with public health officials recommending gathering outdoors when possible, wearing a mask and making sure there?s adequate ventilation?that is, the flow of air in and out of a space?indoors. An air purifier, while not a replacement for these measures, can also help by filtering viruses, like SARS-CoV-2 from the air, says Steven Rogak, a professor in mechanical engineering at the University of British Columbia who is studying the effect of aerosol and droplet control measures for COVID in indoor spaces.
While the virus itself is super tiny, ?it would always be associated with small dr...
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