Coronavirus Technology Solutions

April 28, 2020

 

Air Canada Coronavirus Mitigation Procedures

Aerobiotix Sales of Room Air Purifiers to Hospitals is Booming

More Evidence of Air Borne Virus Transmission in a University of Nebraska Study

Noverus Blog Confirms the Dangers of Air Borne Virus Transmission

Novaerus Air Disinfection Unit Recognized by Chinese Regulatory Agency

Plasma Treatment of Airborne Viruses is Effective

Daikin Technology Effective on Viruses

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Air Canada Coronavirus Mitigation Procedures

Though airlines across the world have radically reduced operations due to the coronavirus, some people still have to fly for a variety of reasons. To protect passengers and crew as much as possible from the transmission of COVID-19, carriers have instituted numerous safety measures. Here’s a look at what Canada’s major airlines are doing to help stop the spread of the coronavirus during flights.

CANADA-TORONTO-COVID-19-MEASURES

In response to a directive from Transport Canada, Air Canada has made masks mandatory. This requirement applies to passengers at specified areas in Canadian airports, during the boarding process and during the flight. Travelers must prove they have a suitable face covering prior to boarding. Acceptable masks include a cloth mask, scarf or similar item. See the Public Health Agency of Canada website for more info.

Air Canada notes that it has implemented physical distancing practices wherever possible and is seating passengers as far apart as possible. The airline is also encouraging customers to check-in online or via the Air Canada app rather than at the airport in order to minimize social contact at airport check-in areas.

Air Canada also reports that it is now making N95 masks and protective single-use gowns available to flight crews. The airline is also providing all flight attendants with gloves, antiseptic wipes and hand sanitizer.

Aerobiotix Sales of Room Air Purifiers to Hospitals is Booming

Dr. David Kirschman, president and CEO of Aerobiotix, a Miamisburg-based air purification company, said over the past few weeks, as the number of confirmed coronavirus cases continues to grow in the U.S., Aerobiotix is selling more Illuvia units than ever before. 
  
“We’ve shipped more units in the past few weeks than we had all year last year,” Kirschman said. “Our business has exploded, I wish it were a different reason why it’s exploded, but our business has exploded. We’re working very hard to ramp up production to meet the demand both in the U.S. and globally.”  

Kirschman said their product is already in 150 hospitals around the world — from Italy, to Africa and beyond.  
 
“We manufacture systems that are deployable in hospitals that go in and recirculate and sterilize air in a facility, or disinfect air,” Kirschman said.  
 
He said it’s critical to the health of doctors and nurses. According to the Ohio Department of Health, here in Ohio, 628 of the confirmed COVID-19 cases are healthcare workers. 
 
“We’re trying not to just protect the patients, but also critically, the healthcare workers,” Kirschman said. “They’re taking very high risks being in these facilities. They’re taking potentially higher doses of the virus in their facilities.”  
 
Which is why he said the Illuvia air recirculation system is so important to have.

Here’s how the system works: 

“It sucks the air into the unit, it goes through a filtration system and it goes through an ultraviolet light system,” Kirschman said. “And so what we have is a special, what we call a photolytic chamber, which is a box where we highly concentrate the ultraviolet light, then run that air through a HEPA filtration system, then back out into the room.” 

More Evidence of Air Borne Virus Transmission in a University of Nebraska Study

Lack of evidence on SARS-CoV-2 transmission dynamics has led to shifting isolation guidelines between airborne and droplet isolation precautions. During the initial isolation of 13 individuals confirmed positive with COVID-19 infection, air and surface samples were collected in eleven isolation rooms to examine viral shedding from isolated individuals. While all 15 individuals were confirmed positive for SARS-CoV-2, symptoms and viral shedding to the environment varied considerably. Many commonly used items, toilet facilities, and air samples had evidence of viral contamination, indicating that SARS-CoV-2 is shed to the environment as expired particles, during toileting, and through contact with fomites. Disease spread through both direct (droplet and person-to-person) as well as indirect contact (contaminated objects and 20 airborne transmission) are indicated, supporting the use of airborne isolation precautions. One Sentence Summary: SARS-CoV-2 is shed during respiration, toileting, and fomite contact, indicating that infection may occur in both direct and indirect contact.

https://aerobiotix.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/Transmission-Potential-of-SARS-CoV-2-in-Viral-Shedding-Observed-at-the-University-of-Nebraska-Medical-Center.pdf

Noverus Blog Confirms the Dangers of Air Borne Virus Transmission

Suspension times will be far higher where there are significant cross-flows, . . . with doors opening, bed and equipment movement, and people walking back and forth,” the BMC Infectious Diseases authors note.

Even a surface landing may not represent the end of a droplet’s airborne life: Droplets can be kicked back up into the air when a healthcare worker removes a gown or exits the room, exposing the worker to infection yet again.

Compounding the risk to medical workers, infectious particles can be stirred up in the course of caring for ill patients. The very procedures used to save patient’ lives — intubation, ventilation, nebulizing, cardiopulmonary resuscitation — can cause doctors and nurses to become infected.

Chinese team was similarly persuaded after sampling the air in a make-shift Wuhan hospital, fashioned from an indoor sports stadium. High RNA concentrations were found in rooms healthcare workers used to remove protective clothing after treating Covid-19 patients.

The researchers suspect that virus-laden aerosols on the clothing were re-launched when the gear was taken off or that contaminated floor dust was propelled airborne by foot traffic.

Either way, the researchers concluded, “The virus aerosol is a potential transmission pathway.”

http://blog.novaerus.com/is-the-new-coronavirus-airborne-and-what-does-airborne-mean-anyway/

Novaerus Air Disinfection Unit Recognized by Chinese Regulatory Agency

China’s National Online Record Information Service Platform for Disinfection Products has recently registered the Defend 1050, Novaerus’ all-in-one air disinfection and purification device. The National Platform recognizes products it deems suitable for disinfection in healthcare facilities nationwide, with all products independently tested to ensure compliance with national hygiene standards.

The 
Defend 1050 is a medical-grade, portable device that uses a combination of plasma and filter technology to safely disinfect and purify indoor air, supplementing surface and hand hygiene for comprehensive infection control. The efficacy of the device was tested and qualified by the Guangzhou Institute of Microbiology.

Text Box: E.coli Bacteria
Destroyed by Novaerus Plasma
after 0.002 seconds

Medium e coli treated circle

The recognition is welcomed at a time when clean, disinfected air is thought to play an important role in preventing the spread of COVID-19. Recently, aerosol transmission was added to the diagnosis and treatment plan issued by the National Health Commission and National Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine as a possible route of coronavirus (COVID-19) infection. This suggests that the virus is not only transmitted via airborne respiratory droplets but also via aerosols that can remain suspended in the air for long periods and can be inhaled.

Novaerus portable air disinfection devices use a non-selective, rapid killing, patented plasma technology, offering a unique and safe solution to kill airborne viruses 24/7. The technology has been independently tested to reduce MS2 Bacteriophage, a commonly used surrogate for SARS-CoV* (Coronavirus) by 99.99%.

Designed for rapid remediation in large spaces and situations with high risk of infection, the Novaerus Defend 1050 (NV1050) uses patented ultra-low energy plasma technology combined with a triple-stage Camfil® filter system to provide a combined solution for air disinfection and particle removal. The free-standing unit can be wheeled easily to point of care and plugs into any outlet.

The Defend 1050’s registration is an important step for Novaerus, as they expand their distribution network in China, providing health facilities across the country access to Novaerus patented clean air technology. Recently, the company donated several air disinfection devices to hospitals in Wuhan, the city at the centre of the COVID-19 outbreak, to help them reinforce their virus protection protocols.

Novaerus is part of WellAir, an Irish company on a mission to reduce indoor airborne pollutants to create living, working, and healing spaces that foster rather than detract from human health, productivity, and wellbeing. WellAir and its brands, Novaerus and Plasma Air, can be found installed in hundreds of hospitals, senior living facilities, schools, casinos, railway stations, residences, and industrial facilities in more than 40 countries around the world.

Plasma Treatment of Airborne Viruses is Effective

Cold atmospheric pressure plasmas have gained significant recognition in recent years in the field of healthcare, for example, in the treatment of living cells, sterilization of medical devices, wound healing, and blood coagulation. The plasmas are nontoxic, provide rapid and continuous antibacterial treatment, leave no residues to clean up, and are easy to scale up, compared to other approaches. They present an advance over radio frequency high vacuum plasmas used in the above applications by eliminating the need for high vacuum pumps and power systems. While the effects of atmospheric pressure plasma on surface bound bacteria have been well studied, their use for treating airborne microorganisms has received much less attention but was the focus of this study by NASA, Stanford and Novaerus researchers.

The effect of dielectric barrier discharge on the morphology and surface chemistry of E. coli was studied using electron microscopy, infrared spectroscopy, and x ray absorption spectroscopy. The electromagnetic field around the DBD coil causes severe distortion of the morphology of E. coli to varying degrees from formation of pores to shrinking and elongation of the cell structure possibly resulting in leakage of vital cellular materials. The observations made from the core level K-edge NEXAFS spectra of carbon, nitrogen and oxygen correlate well with each other as well as with the FTIR spectra confirming the oxidation, formation of oxygenated components, and chemical modification of the cell structure.

The bacteria underwent physical distortion to varying degrees, resulting in deformation of the bacterial structure. The electromagnetic field around the DBD coil caused severe damage to the cell structure, possibly resulting in leakage of vital cellular materials. The bacterial reculture experiments confirm inactivation of airborne E. coli upon treating with DBD.

 https://cmsifyassets-1290.kxcdn.com/nov-production/uploads/asset/281/attachment/Lab_Study_NASA_Ames_E._coli_2016Feb.pdf

 

Daikin Technology Effective on Viruses

Daikin’s unique Streamer discharge technology decomposes and removes allergens such as mold, mites, and pollen along with unpleasant odors. It is effective on viruses as shown below.

The filter also includes plasma technology and HEPA filtration.