From News Nation:
“Do plexiglass COVID barriers
really work, and what will become of them?”
Along with fist bumps and remote
work, another legacy of the COVID-19 pandemic has been the plexiglass
fortification of businesses, airports and government buildings. With the rate
of COVID-19 infections falling in the United States, where a vaccine is readily
available, coffee shop owners, school administrators and others may be
wondering just how long they will keep the barriers in place. Bloomberg reports
that sales of the material tripled during the pandemic, reaching roughly $750
million. The only problem, however, is that it’s hard to find evidence that the
miles of barriers have effectively prevented COVID-19 transmission.
Early in the pandemic, the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the coronavirus was spreading
on surfaces and through droplets between people at close range – droplets
plexiglass barriers are designed to catch. The CDC only fully acknowledged that
it could also be transmitted through the air at distances greater than six feet
last month. Howard A. Stone, a professor of Mechanical & Aerospace
Engineering at Princeton University, worked with the Met Orchestra of New York
in December, 2020 to study how a singer’s breath – captured with an infrared
camera – moves away from the body. His team then used a fog machine to exam how
a plexiglass barrier might protect someone on the other side – results were
mixed. “From my perspective, if you’re on the other side of the barrier from
someone, you are partially protected because the movement of the air is
disrupted by the barrier,” he told NJ.com. “But nonetheless, it can get around.”
Stone pointed out that the air that made
it behind the barrier was mixed, suggesting that the plexiglass might help
dilute virus-contaminated air. “On the other hand, if you’re inside one of
these barriers with someone, and they happen to be infected and you’re not
aware of it, then you’re exposed even more to a higher concentration of what’s
coming out, because the air inside one of these barriers won’t mix as well with
its surroundings,” Stone said. In essence, the plastic tents over “outside”
restaurant tables, for instance, could be trapping the very virus they were
designed to protect against.
A study published by the CDC
examining the efficacy of tools to combat COVID-19 in Georgia elementary
schools found that ventilation and the proper use of masks, rather than
barriers, helped prevent the spread of the virus. In guidance from the
University of Washington, a barrier can, however, be effective as one component
of a larger strategy to prevent virus transmission if installed in a way that doesn’t
block ventilation or cause other safety risks.
The future of our plexiglass
barriers With states across the country opening up and shedding mandates
for businesses and public spaces, what’s next for the plexiglass? Iowa
State University said in a news release that the school is already working on a
second life for the acrylic materials used as barriers, which aren’t easily
recyclable. Industrial design students have created plans for rechargeable
laptop desks, class rings and art installations, among other things. “It
was an awake nightmare, that people will start chucking them into the landfill,”
Katie Baumgarn, classroom scheduling specialist for Iowa State University
Facilities Planning and Management said.
Some businesses are also trying
to head off a recycling nightmare when people realize the barriers can’t just
be dropped off in residential bins. Faulkner’s, a plastic supply company in
Miami, is hosting a recycling drive for business owners who want to drop off
the barriers. The acrylic product can be broken through a process called
chemical recycling to create new items, but many city recycling programs don’t
accept the material. Pandemic task force member and air quality expert Marwa
Zaatari says plexiglass barriers may be treated like the COVID-19 pandemic
regulations currently being rolled back as infection rates drop. Zaatari told
Bloomberg she thinks it will only take “a matter of weeks to remove all the
plexiglass. The question is what they’re going to do with it.”
^ It is understandable that
health officials and the Government didn’t really know what would work and what
would not work in helping to stop the spread of Covid in March and April 2020 –
since it was a brand-new Pandemic. Now we know a lot more and so its good to
see these plexiglass barriers being used for other things. ^
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.