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Miyeembro ng Local government sa Shanghai mismo ang nagsabi na ang coronavirus ay pwedeng kumalat through Aerosol Transmission.
Ang mga sakit tulad ng Flu,measles at tuberculosis ay kumakalat sa ganitong uri din ng transmission na syang mahirap e control.
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Sobrang laki ng bilang ng mga na infect as of writing mga nasa 4,118,783 katao na at na sa 282,947 ang namatay, kadalasan na infect ang mga tao dahil sa pag-ubo, pagbabahing at malapitang contact.
Pero ayon sa bagong pag-aaral ito ay pwedeng kumalat din sa hangin kahit na wala na ang pasyente, ibig sabihin mas mabilis na kumalat ang virus at mas marami ang pwedeng hawaan nito.
Ayon pa sa ulat ng Daily Mail.
This could make it harder for officials to track down contacts of known patients and to contain at-risk people, and increase the danger to healthcare workers.
A member of the Chinese Centre for Disease Control & Prevention, however, slammed the local official's claim as untrue and said there was no proof this was possible – a virus expert in Australia made the same argument.
Zeng Qun, deputy head of Shanghai's Civil Affairs Bureau, made the claim about the virus spreading through the air at a press conference in China at the weekend.
He said: 'Aerosol transmission refers to the mixing of the virus with droplets in the air to form aerosols, which causes infection after inhalation, according to medical experts,' China Daily reported.
The main way the virus is passed on is thought to be through infected droplets, which are expelled when people cough, being breathed in immediately.
These tend to drop to the ground very quickly after being coughed or sneezed up and, although other research has found the virus may remain on hard surfaces for up to nine days and get onto people's hands, it is not at risk of being inhaled.
For a virus to be transmitted through the air it must be infectious even in the tiny quantities found in a droplet small enough to float in the air.
If Mr Zeng's claim proves true it could mean people in hospitals and doctor's surgeries, in particular, are at risk of catching the virus for longer after a patient has left a room or corridor.
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