HVAC Systems Prove Sufficient to Reduce Viral Pathogen Transmission Within a Hospital
Live attenuated influenza vaccine particles were released into a closed room to measure how many particles would get through the HVAC system.
When the COVID-19 pandemic hit, many hospitals struggled to find negative pressure rooms approved by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) for the sudden influx of COVID-19 patients. However, many hospital systems had a very limited number of negative pressure rooms (Table). One of the main considerations was the recirculation of air. If the air used is not 100% outside air, would the air being recirculated transport viral-containing particles from one patient room to the next?
A recent study, “Requirements to Reduce Viral Pathogen Transmission in Health Care HVAC Systems,”presented at the
“CDC sets [a limited] risk of transmission of pathogens that are emitted from one patient inside a patient room that is then transferred through a heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) system back to maybe an adjacent patient room or an entire unit,” Bishoff told Infection Control Today® (ICT®) in an exclusive interview. “What you don't want is to have a ton of transmissions and in a very closed-up area through the HVAC system.”
For the first time, this study demonstrates that “viral containing particles can be transported via a hospital HVAC system from one patient room to the next,” Bishoff wrote in the study. “Taking into account the loss of virus within the HVAC system, the combination of MERV8+MERV16 filters reduces the virus burden reaching an adjacent room to levels well below the human infectious dosages for influenza and other highly infective viruses. Our findings indicate that MERV8+MERV16 filters provide protection against virus transmission through HVAC systems and are a cost-conscious alternative to HEPA filters.”
Considering future investigations, Bishoff said to ICT®,“I think it would be nice to look at the more novel technologies that are coming out [like] neurons that are highly promoted, especially by industry—that is ionization…Mechanical ventilation isn't established [with] these newer technologies, We need a lot more data to say that [air filtration systems] are really safe and do what they promised to do.” Previously, ICT® has reported on this topic
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