Buildings (Oct 2023)

Fomite Transmission in Airports Based on Real Human Touch Behaviors

  • Linan Zhuang,
  • Yuqing Ding,
  • Linlin Zhou,
  • Ronghan Liu,
  • Jiajie Ding,
  • Rui Wang,
  • Weiwei Huang,
  • Shujia Shang,
  • Hua Qian,
  • Nan Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13102582
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 10
p. 2582

Abstract

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The public areas of airports are often bustling, raising the risk of infectious diseases spreading through fomites. We recorded 21.3 h of video at three airports, focusing on nine common areas (e.g., boarding and check-in areas) where people touch surfaces. We analyzed 25,925 touches to create a model for how microbes spread from surfaces to humans through touch. The airport mask-wearing rate is high (96.1% in non-restaurant areas), but it is lower (22%) in restaurants. Passengers touch their mucous membranes more often (10.3 times/hour) in restaurants compared to other areas (1.6 times/hour on average). Wearing a mask can significantly reduce the risk of obtaining a virus through direct contact with hands and mucous membranes. If everyone in non-restaurant areas wore masks, the viral intake fraction could be reduced by up to 97.4% compared to not wearing masks. People touch public surfaces the most in self-service check-in areas, at a rate of 473.5 times per hour. Disinfecting public surfaces or hands twice per hour could reduce the viral intake fraction in each area by 27.7% or 15.4%, respectively. The findings of this study provide valuable data support and a scientific foundation for implementing interventions aimed at mitigating fomite transmission within airport settings.

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