Call for Restaurants to keep doors and windows open
to minimise Covid transfer risk
Restaurants and pubs across the UK are being asked to keep doors
and windows open to allow air to move through their buildings to
reduce airborne transmission of Covid.
It is reported that 91% of all Covid-19 patients are infected
indoors, so the latest advice from experts is to keep air flowing
through buildings where people congregate to mitigate transfer
risks.
“Those of us in the air conditioning business have been banging
this home for years, fresh circulated air is healthier air – you
don’t need a fancy system to do this, just keep a steady flow of
fresh air by opening doors and windows”, explains Libby Jones
from Air Conditioning installer AirCon.co.uk
There are some simple things we can do to reduce risk of
transmission within any building - and it all comes down to
common sense. The usual washing hands, wearing a mask and keeping
distance – but where air is not being exchanged in congested
areas it raises the risks of an infected person’s cough being
recirculated around a room.
It is all about being aware that stale air can carry airborne
particles of Covid-19. Changing habits can reduce the risk
massively.
Open Windows & Doors for 20 minutes per hour
Regular “shock ventilation” is recommended to change out air in
rooms. This means opening windows and doors on a very regular
basis to allow stale air to be changed for fresh.
In a pub or restaurant this can be tricky, but the concept is
clear – the more air you extract and replace with fresh, the
healthier the air. This is a habit we all need to be better at,
because even in post-Covid years ahead (yes, they do exist) we
can all help by sticking to a clean air regime.
“The Germans are going big time into education about ventilation
– they call it Stosslüften meaning “shock ventilation”
and its effects on transmission rates of the virus indoors are
incredibly positive. If you think about it this Winter, that’s
the danger zone, we will be spending more time inside at home, in
restaurants, in offices, and we need to wise up to simple
ventilation habits” explains Libby Jones from Air Conditioning
installer AirCon.co.uk
If everyone can reduce their ability to transmit the virus just a
little bit, we can all help bring down the changes of passing it
around.