Recently released research indicates that it is possible to catch COVID-19 from someone who is in a completely different room.

The research is expected to be published in the March 2022 edition of Emerging Infectious Diseases journal and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shared it as an early release. There may be changes before final publication.

According to the research, an episode of airborne transmission of the SARS-CoV-2 delta variant occurred between people who were in “separate nonadjacent rooms 2.135 meters (7 feet) apart,” and “this conclusion is supported by multiple lines of evidence.” Scientists based this conclusion on an incident that occurred in New Zealand – where international arrivals are quarantined to undergo COVID screenings – this summer.

A traveler arrived in New Zealand July 16 from the Philippines and was placed in a managed quarantine facility, said the research. They tested positive for COVID-19 on July 17 and were transferred to a managed isolation facility on July 19. Although asymptomatic, the individual was considered infectious through July 27 and released from the isolation facility on July 31.... Read More: knx1070