Flights may be mode of spreading swine flu
June 4th, 2010 - 5:13 pm ICT by IANSSydney, June 4 (IANS) There is a small but measurable risk of contracting the Influenza A H1N1 virus or swine flu during long-haul flights, says a study.
This research is the first scientifically documented outbreak of flu on a plane in recent times and has attracted international interest. It was led by public health epidemiologist Michael Baker and Craig Thornley of Auckland Regional Public Health Service (ARPHS).
The research was based on New Zealand’s first brush with swine flu in April 2009 when a flight arrived in Auckland with an infected secondary school group returning from a trip to Mexico.
Nine passengers were confirmed with swine flu and were unwell during the flight. Two other passengers became sick after the flight, and were also confirmed with swine flu.
“The pandemic gave us a unique opportunity to investigate the risk of influenza transmission on a flight. Because this was an entirely new virus to New Zealand, we know that the only place it could come from was from other passengers on this flight,” says Baker.
“That suggests transmission by small droplets produced by coughing and sneezing rather than via fine aerosols carried through the plane’s air-conditioning system,” says Baker.
The study also looked at practical issues about how we manage the risk of introduced infections in airline passengers.
It shows that most passengers on the flight were located and followed up by public health authorities, but only 52 percent were reached within three days of landing.
“Those involved in following up passengers on this flight were faced with considerable challenges,” says Craig Thornley, medical officer at ARPHS.
“An important lesson from this study is that airlines and health authorities need to consider how they can prevent sick people getting onto flights in the first place,” Thornley was quoted as saying in a release.
Baker will present this study at the International Conference on Emerging Infectious Diseases in Atlanta, US, in July.
These findings were published online in the British Medical Journal.
- WHO warns of lab-produced bird flu virus - Dec 31, 2011
- Now, GM chickens that don't spread bird flu - Jan 14, 2011
- Study says that Two-seat hot zone is responsible for flu spreading on planes - Jun 20, 2011
- Flu jabs during pregnancy lower virus risk to baby - Oct 06, 2010
- CDC confirms three new swine flu cases in Iowa - Nov 25, 2011
- WHO Declares Swine Flu Pandemic Officially Over - Aug 11, 2010
- Flu shots ensure birth of healthy babies - Feb 22, 2012
- 58 Mexicans die of flu - Feb 06, 2012
- 81 Mexicans die of swine flu - Feb 12, 2012
- La Nina may trigger flu pandemics: Study - Jan 17, 2012
- Novel approach shows great potential in reducing mortality from flu - Apr 23, 2011
- Suspected swine flu outbreak among New Zealand students - Apr 26, 2009
- Obesity ups death risk for swine flu patients - Jan 05, 2011
- '2009 swine flu pandemic won't return to Maharashtra' - Apr 04, 2012
- Mexican swine flu outbreak kills 29, infects nearly 1,500 - Jan 28, 2012
Tags: aerosols, airline passengers, droplets, emerging infectious diseases, epidemiologist, infectious diseases, influenza, international conference on emerging infectious disease, international interest, long haul flights, medical officer, michael baker, new virus, pandemic, public health authorities, public health service, school group, swine flu, thornley, trip to mexico