The droplet spray/JAMA Network
It wasn’t the droplets
With the Covid-19 pandemic slipping into the world’s rearview mirror, the photographs that helped drive mask hysteria and six-foot distancing are now being refuted by viral experts advising the World Health Organization (WHO).
A picture is worth a thousand words, it has been said, but sometimes they’re the wrong words.
Striking images of droplets of spittle caught by sophisticated photography provided a vivid illustration of what comes out of the mouths of humans when they exhale and helped lead the U.S. Centers for Disease Control to offer this advice in 2020:
As it turns out, however – at least in the view of a panel of experts convened by WHO – the spread of the Covid-19 causing SARS-CoV-2 virus wasn’t about droplets of spittle that fall rather quickly to the ground. It was about aerosols – microscopic particles of moisture or dust that can linger in the air for a long time, travel considerable distances, and build up in significant quantities in closed spaces.
Uncooperative particles like these are what led to the death of “smoking sections” first on American airlines and then in the bars and restaurants in most U.S. states. Schemes to restrict cigarette smoke to limited areas didn’t work because the smoke wouldn’t stay in the smoking section. Instead, it spread everywhere.
The Chinese in April 2020 first suggested the SARS-CoV-2 virus was being carried through the air in the same way. They reported on a cluster of Covid-19 infections that appeared linked to a climate control system moving air around in a restaurant in Guangzhou. The researchers at that time suggested better building ventilation as an important protection against infections.
Fresh air needed
A few months, later an international team of researchers from Georgia, Louisiana and California reported on the danger of closed environments in a peer-reviewed study published on the JAMA Network.
Government officials in the U.S., however, largely ignored the need for ventilation and stuck to the idea that masks and distancing were the best defense against SARS-CoV-2 even after U.S. bars and restaurants – places known for bad ventilation – were identified as hotspots for infection.
By then, researchers who’d picked up on the dangers of poor ventilation were lobbying U.S. officials to take note, but officialdom wasn’t listening. Anchorage bars and restaurants shuttered early in the summer of 2020 were allowed to reopen at the end of August that year with the stipulation that tables be moved at least six-feet apart and that all staff and patrons wear masks.
No mention was made of ventilation, and the masking and separation of tables didn’t work.
Whatever masks did or didn’t do to block the transmissions of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, the researchers concluded, was trumped by the increased number of contacts between the infected and the yet-to-be-infected.
Or maybe masks actually made the problem worse in the poorly ventilated, closed spaces – like bars and restaurants – where a lot of people were getting infected.
Any thinking individual who put on a mask and watched their glasses immediately fog up had to wonder how much virus the mask was blocking versus how much it was aerosolizing and dispersing upward where it could linger in the air even longer.
That was well within the recommended “safety zone” of six feet at the time, but their photo also showed a plume of microscopic particles taking flight from the top of the mask. Those are the kinds of tiny particles WHO has now concluded are the most dangerous carriers of the SARS-CoV-2 virus and most other infectious respiratory diseases.
The new WHO analysis concludes that infections linked to the spittle of individual A contacting individual B – or what it now classified as “direct deposition” – is mainly only a concern among children.
Among adults, the bigger problem is with the smaller, airborne particles to which the viruses attach themselves.
And at a size of 50 to 140 nanometers (nm), the SARS-CoV-2 virus can be carried by the tiniest of airborne particles. “A dust mite is typically 200 (microns) in size,” News Medical notes. “If we take a 100 nm SARS-CoV-2 particle, this makes the dust mite 2,000 times larger.”
The small size of the SARS-CoV-2 virus is important for a couple of reasons, the first being that these small particles are easily inhaled deep into the lungs without being caught by the innate immune system built into the mucosa and the second being these same viruses can be easily exhaled from the lungs when we breath.
Thus no need for coughing, hacking or sneezing to spread the virus.
“During normal breathing and talking, 80 to 90 percent of (SARS-CoV-2) droplet sizes are less than one micron…(and) subject to aerosol transport. Since breathing and speaking occur more frequently than coughs and sneezes, they have a critical role in viral transmission, particularly from asymptomatic cases.”
The mouth filters
Simple cloth masks cannot filter out particles this small, but the much better N95 respirators are credited with being able to stop particles down to the size of 0.1 to 0.3 microns. It is believed this makes them capable of stopping many of the SARS-CoV-2 particles.
Still, given that a nanometer is only a thousandth of a micron in size, it is conceivable that a 50 nm SARS-CoV-2 virus could be carried by a particle small enough to pass through even an N95. But the N95 masks certainly help reduce the likelihood of inhaling a large number of SARS-CoV-2 viruses.
And the number of particles inhaled matters because it takes a certain dose of them to spark an infection.
Much of this was understood more than a century ago when the Spanish flu pandemic killed an estimated 50 million people worldwide. The advice then was to open the windows and stay out of poorly ventilated indoor spaces.
Somehow this historic understanding of the ability of viruses to accumulate in enclosed spaces and then infect people came to be disputed and then buried. When the first study came out suggesting the SARS-CoV-2 virus, like the influenza viruses that preceded it, could spread over long distances as aerosols, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s Covid czar, declared the study “terribly misleading” and mocked it.
In a display complete with body theatrics at a White House press briefing in March 2020, he said, “So if you go way back,” leaning back as he said it, “and go, achoo,” at which point he jerked forward, “and go like that, you might get 27 feet” for a droplet throw.
“That’s not practical,” he said. “That is not practical.”
But, he argued, “it doesn’t mean anything” because most infections are due to droplets, and “if you’re six feet distance and you’re wearing a mask, you don’t worry about that.”
It means something
The WHO’s latest recommendations flip Fauci’s percentages on their head with the organization’s panel of experts believing most infections are due to aerosols with droplets falling in the five, 10, 15-percent categories.
The idea droplets were the problem became “dogma,” as Seminario described it, because government officials repeated it over and over again and a legacy media which has become too often the propaganda arm of the vast government bureaucracy echoed the claims even as the evidence was building that accumulations of SARS-CoV-2 aerosols in enclosed spaces were infecting people.
The problem should have been obvious by the summer of 2020 when temperatures in the South went up, people moved into air-conditioned spaces to escape, and Covid-19 infections skyrocketed.
But his observations, like the mask study of the Vermont researchers, attracted little attention in the legacy media and U.S. government policy remained wedded to masks and distancing.
There have, however, been no attempts made to impose new ventilation requirements for U.S. buildings.
And given the entrenched, U.S. position of droplets as the main SARS-CoV-2 risk, some are now skeptical that the new information from WHO will change anything in this country.
Brosseau would appear to believe the scientists are free to ignore the “listen to the science” advice preached to the unwashed masses since the beginning of the pandemic.

Thank you. Well investigated.
Frames the larger dilemma well. Important story, well told. C.
Follow the science. Correction: money.