Vapers infected with Covid-19 are up to 17 per cent more likely to spread it because they blow the viruses around when they breathe out, a study has claimed.
Experts say puffing out vapour from e-cigarettes could propel thousands of viruses towards people in the surrounding area.
And the Covid-19-plagued droplets could travel more than two metres, a distance longer than Eswatini’s social distancing rules.
Experts have called on vapers not to use their devices while in queues, at bus stops or other places where people are at risk of encountering a ‘vape cloud’.
In the study the researchers, from Mexico, Italy and New Zealand, said it would be ‘extremely intrusive’ to tell people to stop vaping indoors at home but that it might be sensible to ban it in public spaces such as restaurants and train stations.
They said the risk posed by ‘low intensity’ vaping, which was just exhaling gently, was smaller than the risk from speaking or coughing while close to someone.
The team did not compare vaping to smoking real cigarettes but said ‘most of the results we obtain are applicable to “mainstream” smoke exhalations emitted by smokers’.
In the study scientists modelled how much virus could be carried by low intensity vape clouds, when it is held in the mouth and pushed into the lungs before being exhaled, and high intensity, when it is inhaled directly into the lungs and blown out.
They found low intensity puffs from infected individuals led to a ‘miniscule extra contagion risk’, raising the chance of bystanders catching the virus by one per cent.
But high intensity jets of air, caused by someone actively blowing out the vapour, pushed up their risk by between five and 17 per cent.
Their model was based on a mechanical jet which produced a puff of air intended to be similar to that breathed out by vapers.
And to work out the difference in risk of transmission between different types of breathing, they considered the volume of air and droplets in each breath, the distance the air could travel and the possible viral load – number of viruses – that might be carried on it if they were infected.
The coronavirus is known to spread through the air when people breathe out, talk, cough or sneeze, and the more air that is expelled, the higher the risk is.
The researchers found that the breath volume and distance travelled was higher than normal breathing for people who vaped ‘intensively’.
This meant that, if they were infected with the coronavirus, more of these viruses could piggyback on the droplets in their breath and spread to other people.
They then applied this to a mathematical model to calculate the 17 per cent increase in risk, rather than measuring raw numbers of viruses or infections.
The scientists, led by Dr Roberto Sussman from the Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, said the chemicals in the vapour were unlikely to kill off the virus.
Although there was no proof that vapers were spreading the virus, they said: ‘While there is currently no factual evidence that pathogens have been spread through this route, it is entirely plausible that this should occur.’
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