Thank you! Indeed, ventilation is a layer in the mitigation stack. But understanding the role of short-range aerosols and potential airborne transmission makes how we should do the rest clearer. https://twitter.com/brianbruce7/status/1289039672627396608?s=21 …https://twitter.com/BrianBruce7/status/1289039672627396608 …
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Note to editors assigning COVID pieces. This is ~5K words, (Had another 1K on hygiene theater when
@DKThomp scooped me with a great piece!). Overwhelming feedback: thank you for the details! Do let your writers go long and treat the reader as a partner.
https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2020/07/why-arent-we-talking-more-about-airborne-transmission/614737/ …7 replies 47 retweets 256 likesShow this thread -
zeynep tufekci Retweeted Rachel Barnhart
Yes. When schools open, they need to focus on ventilation, masks and distancing/separation especially among the staff and the older students. A sensible level of cleaning high-touch surfaces is good, but ventilation/masks is key and not to be overlooked!https://twitter.com/rachbarnhart/status/1289245963773546500 …
zeynep tufekci added,
8 replies 63 retweets 189 likesShow this thread -
People have been asking about germicidal UV lights for killing the virus in indoor spaces. It is a real tool, and hospitals use it, but I did not include that in the article because it is not something to try without calling in the experts. Real dangers. https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2020/07/why-arent-we-talking-more-about-airborne-transmission/614737/ …
8 replies 34 retweets 171 likesShow this thread -
zeynep tufekci Retweeted Tressie McMillan Cottom
I’ve been looking for a good analogy to airborne vs sprayborne, and asked all the experts, and this may yet be the best (for people who go to hair salons!)
This matters, because having the correct mental model can empower people to think through this.https://twitter.com/tressiemcphd/status/1289602987711582208 …zeynep tufekci added,
Tressie McMillan CottomVerified account @tressiemcphdDon Milton’s examples of droplet differences are a little high class. If it helps anyone else, I find it useful to think of the difference between hair spritz and fine hair spray. If it’s L’Oréal Elnett we are screwed. If it’s Pump it Up we are less screwed. https://twitter.com/miketuritzin/status/1289093700132380674 …Show this thread4 replies 50 retweets 184 likesShow this thread -
zeynep tufekci Retweeted
Exactly. Aerosols are like short-range mist—the closer you are to the person emitting it, the more exposure *but* under the right conditions (poorly ventilated indoors space), the mist can accumulate and even be pushed around by air currents beyond 6 feet. https://twitter.com/dylanhmorris/status/1289612851762667521 …
zeynep tufekci added,
This Tweet is unavailable.10 replies 50 retweets 188 likesShow this thread -
zeynep tufekci Retweeted Peter Staley
So this happened!
https://twitter.com/peterstaley/status/1289565286035750912 …zeynep tufekci added,
Peter StaleyVerified account @peterstaleyMy morning text to#TonyFauci, which led to a call during his powerwalk. He said he'd share it w/@CDCDirector (hopefully when Redfield comes up for air from licking you-know-whose you-know-what). An amazing article,@zeynep! A must-read for everyone: https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2020/07/why-arent-we-talking-more-about-airborne-transmission/614737/ … pic.twitter.com/97iZYu1P3611 replies 40 retweets 420 likesShow this thread -
What it's like to be a woman writing about tech/science/society. Two things happened the same day, and one of them is random dude telling me I "clearly have no clue" about airborne spread, just after I wrote a ~5K article about it. No track record is ever good enough for women.
pic.twitter.com/a0po2Pk24A
11 replies 60 retweets 334 likesShow this thread -
Because of my piece on ventilation, I keep getting asked for practical advice. CDC and health authorities should update guidelines. But for individuals? I'd say avoid Japan's 3Cs: closed spaces, crowded places, close-range conversations. And wear masks. https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2020/07/why-arent-we-talking-more-about-airborne-transmission/614737/ …pic.twitter.com/w9lnPVUhDB
8 replies 211 retweets 469 likesShow this thread -
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