New health study reveals that coronavirus can remain on bank notes for up to 28 days

 

HEALTH experts have published a new survey indicating why the coronavirus pandemic refuses to go away warning that the Covid-19 virus can remain alive on certain surfaces including banknotes and phone screens for up to 28 days.

 

Since the pandemic struck early this year in China, it has spread globally and despite efforts to eradicate it, the virus refuses to go away. Now, a recent study has explained why, pointing out that the virus can remain infectious on surfaces such as banknotes, phone screens and stainless steel for as long as 28 days.

 

Previous studies had put the survival rate of the virus on bank notes at four days, stainless steel at two to three days and seven days on the outside of surgical masks. However, the recent findings from Australia’s national science agency suggest Covid-19 can survive far longer on surfaces than previously thought.

 

This study, published in the Virology Journal, found the virus survived for less time at hotter temperatures and stopped being infectious within 24 hours at 40°C on some surfaces. It also stayed longer on smooth, non-porous surfaces than on porous materials such as cloth, which was found to not carry any infectious virus for 14 days.

 

Researchers explained that all experiments were carried out in the dark, to negate any effects of UV light. Their study read: “At 20°C infectious Sard-CoV-2 virus was still detectable after 28 days post inoculation, for all non-porous surfaces tested including glass, polymer note, stainless steel, vinyl and paper notes.

 

“The recovery of Sars-CoV-2 on porous material (cotton cloth) was reduced compared with most non-porous surfaces, with no infectious virus recovered past day 14 post inoculation. These findings demonstrate Sars-CoV-2 can remain infectious for significantly longer time periods than generally considered possible. These results could be used to inform improved risk mitigation procedures to prevent the fomite spread of Covid-19.”

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