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CDC study: Middle-seat blocking reduces Covid exposure

Leaving middle seats on aircraft open reduces passengers exposure to Covid-19 by 23% to 57%, according to a CDC study released Wednesday.

Release time : 2021-04-15 10:51:23
source : Travel Weekly

Leaving middle seats on aircraft open reduces passengers' exposure to Covid-19 by 23% to 57%, according to a CDC study released Wednesday.

The findings come as Delta Air Lines, the final U.S. airline blocking middle seats, prepares to end that practice at the end of the month.

However, authors stress that the study charts Covid-19 exposure risk, not transmission risk, and it does not consider the impact of mask-wearing.

Related: Airlines should tone down their Covid safety assertions

Related: Defense Dept. study finds little risk of Covid spread on planes

For the study, researchers at the CDC and Kansas State University tested single-aisle aircraft using a five-row section of a Boeing 737 fuselage. They tested widebodies using an 11-row section of a Boeing 767 cabin mock-up. The researchers used spray bottles to disperse a virus called bacteriophage MS2 as a surrogate for Covid-19.

In the first metric, authors looked at the impact of removing a middle-seat passenger from a single row. Doing so reduces the risk of Covid-19 exposure for the remaining flyers in that row by 23%, they found.

In the second scenario, the researchers considered the impact of removing middle-seat passengers across an otherwise full 120-seat plane in which one, two or three passengers are infected. A 35% to 39.4% reduction in exposure was found compared with when the plane is full.

In the final research approach, the authors considered a theoretical cluster of nine infected passengers among three rows that had a total of 18 seats. When a third of those passengers were removed, including three who were infected, exposure to the virus reduced by 57%.

The authors acknowledged that the study has limitations, including not considering the impact of masks, which should reduce exposure risk.

But the limitations cut both ways. The study only assessed virus aerosols, not larger droplets. Since exposures decrease more rapidly with distance for droplets, leaving middle seats open would

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