Impulse Dispersion of Aerosols during Singing and Speaking: A Potential COVID-19 Transmission Pathway

Echternach et al discuss their study on impulse dispersion of aerosols during singing and speaking as a potential COVID-19 transmission pathway. Group singing events have been associated with several outbreaks of infection during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic. This link supports the po...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine 2020-12, Vol.202 (11), p.1584-1587
Hauptverfasser: Echternach, Matthias, Gantner, Sophia, Peters, Gregor, Westphalen, Caroline, Benthaus, Tobias, Jakubaß, Bernhard, Kuranova, Liudmila, Döllinger, Michael, Kniesburges, Stefan
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container_end_page 1587
container_issue 11
container_start_page 1584
container_title American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine
container_volume 202
creator Echternach, Matthias
Gantner, Sophia
Peters, Gregor
Westphalen, Caroline
Benthaus, Tobias
Jakubaß, Bernhard
Kuranova, Liudmila
Döllinger, Michael
Kniesburges, Stefan
description Echternach et al discuss their study on impulse dispersion of aerosols during singing and speaking as a potential COVID-19 transmission pathway. Group singing events have been associated with several outbreaks of infection during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic. This link supports the possibility that aerosols are partly responsible for person-to-person infection. The study aims to analyze the impulse dispersion dynamics of aerosols in professional singers concerning the differences between singing a text, singing a vowel, or speaking at different levels of loudness.
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subjects Adult
Aerosols
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Correspondence
COVID-19
COVID-19 - transmission
Disease transmission
Disease Transmission, Infectious
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Pandemics
Singing
Speaking
Speech
title Impulse Dispersion of Aerosols during Singing and Speaking: A Potential COVID-19 Transmission Pathway
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