Children seem to spread less aerosol particles than adults do

Publicly released:
International
mohamed_hassan on pixabay
mohamed_hassan on pixabay

Children produce less aerosol particles (which are tiny droplets in the breath that can carry SARS-CoV-2 and other viruses) when speaking and singing than adults do, according to international researchers who measured the emission rate of 15 pre-adolescent children at rest, while speaking, singing, and shouting, and compared them to 15 adults under the same conditions. The study found that the children's aerosol particle production was around four times lower than adults. The team suggest that this data could help to supplement SARS-CoV-2 risk management scenarios for schools and extracurricular settings.

News release

From: The Royal Society

Pre-adolescent children exhibit lower aerosol particle volume emissions than adults for breathing, speaking, singing and shouting

Journal of the Royal Society Interface

Speaking and singing are activities linked to increased aerosol particle emissions from the respiratory system, dependent on the utilized vocal intensity. As a result, these activities have experienced considerable restrictions in enclosed spaces since the onset of the pandemic due to the risk of infection from the SARS-CoV-2 virus, transmitted by virus-carrying aerosols. These constraints have affected public education and extracurricular activities for children as well, from in-person music instruction to children’s choirs. However, existing risk assessments for children have been based on emission measurements of adults. To address this, we measured the particle emission rates of 15 pre-adolescent children, all eight to ten years old, with a laser particle counter for the test conditions: breathing at rest, speaking, singing, and shouting. Compared with values taken from 15 adults, emission rates for breathing, speaking, and singing were significantly lower for children. Particle emission rates were reduced by a factor of 4.3 across all conditions, whereas emitted particle volume rates were reduced by a factor of 4.8. These data can supplement SARS-CoV-2 risk management scenarios for various school and extracurricular settings.

Journal/
conference:
Journal of the Royal Society Interface
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Germany
Funder: This study was supported by the sub-project B-FAST (Bundesweites Forschungsnetz Angewandte Surveillance und Testung) of the joint project National Research Network of University Medicine on COVID-19, funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF–FKZ 01KX2021).
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