A staff member of Japan Airlines wearing a protective face mask and gloves cleans the cabin of a plane after a domestic flight in Tokyo, Japan, on May 26 2020.
Image: REUTERS/ KIM KYUNG-HOON
Loading ...

A campaign by coronavirus-stricken aviation giants to persuade the world it is safe to fly has been questioned by one of the scientists whose research it draws upon.

Dr David Freedman, a US infectious diseases specialist, said he declined to take part in a recent presentation by International Air Transport Association (Iata) with plane makers Airbus, Boeing and Embraer that cited his work.

While he welcomed some industry findings as “encouraging”, Freedman said a key assertion about the improbability of catching Covid-19 on planes was based on “bad math”.

Airlines and plane makers are anxious to restart international travel, even as a second wave of infections and restrictions take hold in many countries.

Loading ...

The October 8 media presentation listed in-flight infections reported in scientific studies or by Iata airlines — and compared the tally with total passenger journeys in 2020.

“With only 44 identified potential cases of flight-related transmission among 1.2-billion travellers, that’s one case for every 27-million,” Iata medical adviser Dr David Powell said in a news release, echoed in comments during the event.

Iata said its findings “align with the low numbers reported in a recently published peer-reviewed study by Freedman and Wilder-Smith”.

But Freedman, who co-authored the paper in the Journal of Travel Medicine with Dr Annelies Wilder-Smith of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said he took issue with Iata’s risk calculation because the reported count bore no direct relation to the unknown real number of infections.

" They wanted me at that press conference to present the stuff, but honestly I objected to the title they had put on it "

“They wanted me at that press conference to present the stuff, but honestly I objected to the title they had put on it,” the University of Alabama academic said.

“It was bad math; 1.2-billion passengers during 2020 is not a fair denominator because hardly anybody was tested. How do you know how many people really got infected?” he said. “The absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.”

Iata believes its calculation remains a “relevant and credible” sign of low risk, a spokesperson said in response to requests for comment from the industry body and its top medic Powell.

“We’ve not claimed it’s a definitive and absolute number.”

Wilder-Smith could not be immediately reached for comment.

While the pandemic has seen some airlines leave middle seats empty to reassure customers, the industry has opposed making such measures mandatory.

Plane cabins are considered lower-risk than many indoor spaces because of their powerful ventilation and their layout, with forward-facing passengers separated by seat rows. Ceiling-to-floor airflows sweep pathogens into high-grade filters.

That understanding is supported by simulations and tests run by the aircraft makers as well as a US defence department study released on Thursday.

The joint presentation with all three manufacturers signalled a rare closing of ranks among industrial arch-rivals, behind a message designed to reassure.

Sitting beside an infected economy passenger is comparable to 2m distancing in an office, Boeing tests concluded, posing an acceptably low risk with masks. Standard health advice often recommends a 1,8m separation.

Airbus showed similar findings, while Embraer tested droplet dispersal from a cough. About 0.13% by mass ended up in an adjacent passenger’s facial area, falling to 0.02% with masks.

Dr Henry Wu, associate professor at Atlanta’s Emory School of Medicine, said the findings were inconclusive on their own because the minimum infective dose remains unknown, and risks increase in step with exposure time.

“It’s simply additive,” said Wu, who would prefer middle seats to be left empty. “A 10-hour flight will be 10 times riskier than a one-hour flight.”

Nonetheless, a commercial jet cabin is “probably one of the safer public settings you can be in”, he said. “Sitting at a crowded bar for a few hours is going to be much riskier.”

Reuters


Loading ...
Loading ...
View Comments