key: cord-282085-r3w90vg8 authors: Epperly, D. E.; Caney, D. N. title: COVID-19 Viral Loads, Environment, Ventilation, Masks, Exposure Time, And Severity : A Pragmatic Guide Of Estimates date: 2020-10-05 journal: nan DOI: 10.1101/2020.10.03.20206110 sha: doc_id: 282085 cord_uid: r3w90vg8 It is desirable to better characterize and understand how ventilation improvements in office spaces could offer significant protection against transmission of COVID-19. It is also desirable to understand how ventilation in office spaces compares to outdoor settings. An attempt to find this information from online searches that included medical journals, private industry, and US government provided materials failed to find specific quantitative estimates and recommendations, which motivated this study. This study uses measured amounts of SARS-CoV-2 in the air of a hospital room with COVID-19 patients from a published and peer-reviewed study and known Influenza A challenge doses from a published and peer-reviewed study and known ASHRAE Office Ventilation standards and an Outdoor Air Exchange model to estimate the time necessary to cause various exposure levels and resulting infection potential in various indoor and outdoor settings of both Influenza A and COVID-19. While these estimations have unknown error margins and cannot be considered authoritative, they may have utility in comparing various environments and relative risk factors. The estimates in this study also present an initial framework and specific quantitative examples for better understanding of the effects of ventilation on aerosolized transmission, and the immunology related to challenge doses, and the potential for low-level viral load exposure to result in some level of immunity without symptoms of illness (asymptomatic infection). Specific quantitative examples of exposure viral load versus symptoms and immune response may Increase public understanding and consciousness of concepts such as viral load, exposure time, challenge dose levels, shedding quantities, immune seroconversion, and re-challenge and could achieve new levels of personal hygiene that complement centuries-old adages such as wash your hands. A study entitled Validation of the Wild-type Influenza A Human Challenge Model H1N1pdMIST: An A(H1N1) pdm09 Dose-Finding Investigational New Drug Study 10 demonstrated that low viral load exposures caused people to develop increased immunity levels without becoming significantly sick -they "seroconverted while having minimal clinical illness and no shedding". Abbreviations: MMID, mild to moderate influenza disease; TCID50, 50% tissue culture infectious dose. It can be seen from the study that symptoms increased significantly at 10^5 TCID50 exposure in an influenza A (H1N1 challenge study. Shedding significantly increased at 10^6. Another human challenge study of H3N2 Influenza A found similar results in "A Dose-finding Study of a Wild-type Influenza A(H3N2) Virus in a Healthy Volunteer Human Challenge Model" 11 Throughout this study, the "Dose" listed above will be associated with symptom categorizations as follows: • This study considers that the common use of the phrase "COVID-19 Mild Case" best matches the symptoms of "mild to moderate influenza disease" (MMID) in terms of the illness experience. Anything without MMID would not be "Flu like", but might be cold-like or sore-throat-like and this study considers that "Not Ill" given all the severity concerns surrounding COVID-19 cases. Since 20% of those in the study challenge group experienced MMID at the 10^5 exposure level, this was probably the best exposure level to use to describe "Mild Illness" / "COVID-19 Mild Case". Since the majority the 10^6 and above exposure levels experienced MMID, this is considered the level at which "Possible Severe Illness" might develop -conversely, below this level, development of severe illness necessitating medical attention would be expected to be extremely rare. Since COVID- 19 and Influenza A severity has many determinants, these categorizations assume good general health and no significant co-morbidities. While these "power of 10" boundaries are only approximately reflective of reality, they are helpful for estimation. Per "Viable SARS-CoV-2 in the air of a hospital room with COVID-19 patients" 12 , it was found that "viable virus was isolated from air samples collected 2 to 4.8m away from the patients" in a 3.5 x 7.0 meter hospital room with "six air changes per hour" (0.1 air exchanges per minute). "Estimates of viable viral concentrations ranged from 6 to 74 TCID50 units/L of air.". Regardless of the number of infected patients, this study uses the mean viral concentration of 40 TCID50 units/L of air as the reference environment that contains one or more sick persons. Since the ceiling height was not specified, it can be estimated from "Ceilings in patient bed areas including Bed Rooms, Bed Bays and Recovery areas should be a minimum of 2700mm." 13 Therefore, the entire room can be estimated to be 66 cubic meters (2331 cubic feet). Normalized to the Outdoor Air Exchange Model, this would be a room of 3375 cubic feet at 337.5 CFM producing 6 air exchanges per hour (0.1 air exchanges per minute). No specific mention of patient face masks was noted in the reference hospital room, so this study assumes none were in place on these patients. It appears that at least 1 of the patients was strongly positive with a 32 Ct PCR test, but these 2 hospital patients may not be among the strongest level of shedding patients. They may or may not represent a "typical" hospital patient shedding scenario. This study uses an aerosol diffusion and dilution model that scales linearly with air exchange. Given a reference scenario of a specific stable aerosol concentration at 6 air exchanges per hour, that concentration would be considered to diminish to half of the reference at 12 ACPH. Additionally, this study's model of air exchanges does not consider area population densities such as "cubic feet of available air per person". Perhaps obviously, a large warehouse with 2 people at 6 air exchanges per hour would likely be safer than a small room with the same 6 ACPH. This study uses a hospital room with specified dimensions as the reference case, so population density adjustments would need to be made for crowded clubs or sparsely populated warehouses. Diffusion and dilution realities are more complex than the model used in this study and better estimates could be achieved with better models. It would be preferred to have more data regarding indoor aerosolized viral concentrations at distances of approximately 2 to 5 meters from an infected individual. Having only 1 reference environment is a limitation of this study. Perhaps a later work can improve upon this limitation. Adult respiration rate "while resting is about 5-8 litres per minute", and "light activities minute volume may be around 12 litres" 14 and "moderate exercise may be between 40 and 60 litres per minute". In this study, the respiration rates of 12 L/m and 60L/m will be considered for the person being exposed. "According to ASHRAE Standard 62.1, an office will require 4-10 air changes per hour depending on the occupancy and size of the office." In an example ventilation "rule of thumb" example, a room of 6912 cubic feet having 6 air exchanges per hour would require 691 CFM. 15 Normalized to the Outdoor Air Exchange Model, this would be a room of 3375 cubic feet at 337.5 CFM producing 6 air exchanges per hour (0.1 air exchanges per minute). All rights reserved. No reuse allowed without permission. (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. The copyright holder for this preprint this version posted October 5, 2020. . Since no viral load challenge data for COVID-19 could be found at time of writing, this study must adjust estimates from challenge data for Influenza A to estimate SARS-CoV-2 infectivity. SARS-CoV-2 has been claimed to have R0 values ranging from 1.5 to 3.5 to 5.7 depending upon estimation sources. The mean of these 3 numbers is about 3.6. H1N1 Influenza R0 is widely estimated to be near 1.46 to 1.48 with a mean of 1.47. The R0 means of Influenza A vs COVID-19 R0 calculate to a ratio of about 1 to 2.5. Using Infection Fatality Rates (IFR) of 0.1% for Influenza A and 0.4% for COVID-19 shows about a 1 to 4 ratio. Total Fatalities for a typical Influenza A year vs COVID-19 appear to be about a 1 to 3 ratio as of September 2020. The mean of these 3 ratios calculates to 3.2. This study chose to round up to 4 with a bias toward representing COVID-19 as much more aggressive than Influenza A, which creates more "conservative" estimates that result in additional "safety margin". The reader / observer is free to re-calculate the spreadsheet times based on a different "Influenza A To COVID-19 Infectivity Multiplier" as this adjustment multiplier value accuracy is a limitation of this study and is admittedly weakly supported. Future studies could improve this adjustment value. Based on the aerosolization model defined above, this study will consider that viral shedding levels of both Influenza A and COVID-19 are similar for patients of similar infection severity. Thus, from the shedding perspective, Influenza A and COVID-19 shedding data are considered equivalent in this study. All rights reserved. No reuse allowed without permission. (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. The copyright holder for this preprint this version posted October 5, 2020. . https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.10.03.20206110 doi: medRxiv preprint It has been shown in various challenge studies as noted earlier that case severity tends to increase with increasing initial exposure viral load. Patient viral loads also vary dramatically depending upon stage of illness. 16 Figure 1 , it can be seen that symptoms typically became observable within 3 days of challenge. From data in that study relating to the pre-symptomatic phase, the viral load contributing to shedding at day 1.5 was about 10^3 and was 10^4 or higher during the peak symptom period. This represents a 10 fold increase between the median pre-symptomatic time period and the peak symptom period, keeping in mind that patients in this study did not experience severe symptoms that would require hospitalization, though they were studied in a clinical environment. Per "Viable SARS-CoV-2 in the air of a hospital room with COVID-19 patients" 17 it is known that both patients were hospitalized which would suggest that their cases were more severe than a typical mild COVID-19 case and that maximum shedding would be greater than mid-phase pre-symptomatic shedding for these same patients. Patient 1 had a PCR Cq [similar to Ct] of 32 which is 2^4 (16x) less than that of a typical Cq positive threshold of 36 or below (some use Cq < 40) 18 . Patient 2 had an unspecified Cq. The hospitalized COVID-19 patients experiencing a more severe case COVID-19 than that of the Influenza A study suggests that the patients tend to have longer periods of symptoms and shedding than that of the Influenza A study. Taking the average of the 10 fold increase from the Influenza study and a 16x Cq from positive threshold in the COVID-19 hospital air study, this study uses a roughly 13 to 1 ratio of symptomatic to pre-symptomatic shedding multiplier. That is to say that during mid-point of pre-symptomatic period (median of time to symptoms), the shedding is about 1/13 th that of a hospitalized COVID-19 patient during the mid point of their hospitalization. So the air viral load was adjusted from 40 TCID50 units / liter as measured in the hospitalized COVID-19 patients to an estimate of 3 TCID50 units / liter for the mid-phase pre-symptomatic individual modeled in this study. Due to rapidly rising viral loads during the pre-symptomatic phase of infection, any estimate is widely dependent upon the viral load replicating within the infected individual. When considering Exposure Period estimates in Table 2 , the likelihood of encountering someone who is already experiencing minor symptoms, or nearly so on the illness timeline, should be considered. A study on mask efficacy suggests that the Exposure Period estimate in the table could be adjusted to accommodate mask usage. "Surgical masks nearly eliminated viral RNA detection in the coarse aerosol fraction with a 25 fold reduction in the number of viral copies, a statistically significant 2.8 fold reduction in copies detected in the fine aerosol fraction, and an overall statistically significant 3.4 fold reduction of viral copy number in the exhaled aerosols." 19 Comparing a 3375 cubic foot office with 6 air exchanges per hour (per ASHRAE Standard 62.1) with an comparable sized open space outdoor setting with a 3 MPH breeze (1056 air exchanges per hour) shows that a similarly sized outdoor space has 176 times more air exchanges over any given time period than a small office or a hospital room similar to the reference cases used in this study. An open outdoor space is further superior due to its virtual "infinite ceiling". Additionally, indoor spaces tend to have areas of stagnant air flow around the cubicles, furniture, and other semi-enclosed spaces within the room. Table 2 considers the cases of a non-infected person in an indoor environment within 2 to 4.8 meters of 2 infected persons and estimates the Exposure Period related to Likely Outcomes. The entire table uses shedding equivalency for Influenza A and COVID-19 as stated previously. Rows 1 through 10 consider the case of a non-infected person in the environment performing light activity functions and respirating accordingly, while rows 11 and 12 consider a person engaging in heavy exercise or otherwise respirating at 60 liters per minute. Table 2 provide documentation and analysis of the "reference" environment which has 2 hospitalized Influenza A patients at 4 challenge Influenza A doses from the respective studies. It uses an Influenza A infectivity model. From those 4 rows, it can be seen that the non-infected visitor not wearing any PPE / masks would likely remain Not Ill when present for less than 2 minutes, and perhaps develop a Minor Illness after 20 minutes, and likely having Mild Illness after 3.5 hours, and almost assuredly becoming Ill after 34 hours. Immune response and some level of immunity could begin in as short as 2 minutes, but more likely would occur after more than 3.5 hours. The visitor would be unlikely to shed any virus until around or after a 3.5 hour visit. Again, this considers patients ill with Influenza A using direct Influenza A Challenge Study data. Rows 5 and 6 use estimations to model the 2 hospitalized patients with visitor result as if the patients were ill with COVID-19. From those 2 rows, it can be seen that the non-infected visitor not wearing any PPE / masks would perhaps develop a Minor Illness after 5 minutes, and likely experiencing Mild Illness after 52 minutes. Rows 7 through 12 use estimations to model the result as if a pre-symptomatic person was infected with COVID-19 but NOT yet far enough into the infection as to have symptoms and large amounts of aerosolized shedding that would likely be present in a hospitalized patient with symptoms requiring hospital admission. In rows 7 through 9, it can be seen that the non-infected visitor would perhaps develop a Minor Illness after 1 hour, and likely experiencing Mild Illness after 11 hours. In row 10, the estimation is adjusted to simulate an outdoor environment with a 3 MPH wind as noted above. It can be seen that the non-infected visitor not wearing any PPE / masks within 2 to 4.8 meters of 2 infected persons would likely remain Not Ill when present for less than 20 hours. This 20 hours estimate clearly shows the contrast between indoor environments that have no special ventilation measures and outdoor settings. Indoor settings with strong ventilation improvements could begin to approach those of an outdoor setting. In rows 11 and 12, the estimation is adjusted to simulate the same outdoor environment, but with the non-infected visitor exercising around 2 resting pre-symptomatics. It can be seen that a non-infected person would likely remain Not Ill when present for less than 4 hours and perhaps develop a Minor Illness after 40 hours. This implies that outdoors is low risk even without masks. While it was considered too complex to estimate the case of 2 pre-symptomatics exercising heavily with an uninfected person outdoors, it may be possible extrapolate this scenario from the table. In rows 13 through 18, the estimation is adjusted to simulate an indoor environment with 24 air exchanges per hour, which is 4 time more ventilation than the reference office. Similar to the previous rows, individuals ill with COVID-19 and pre-symptomatic individuals are considered. In row 19, an outdoor environment is simulated with a person exercising near individuals ill with COVID-19. Rows 20 through 27 add surgical mask considerations. An N-95 mask would have even better performance. All rights reserved. No reuse allowed without permission. (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. The copyright holder for this preprint this version posted October 5, 2020. . Table 2 shows the multiple potential scenarios based on a spreadsheet formula 20 . All rights reserved. No reuse allowed without permission. (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. The copyright holder for this preprint this version posted October 5, 2020. . https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.10.03.20206110 doi: medRxiv preprint From Results, it can be seen that likely outcomes vary widely based on ventilation conditions and the level of shedding of the infected individual. While the estimates predict that most outdoor settings with as low as a mild 3 MPH breeze are likely to result in no or Minor Illness, there are many determinants associated with severe cases including comorbidities such as skilled-nursing-facility resident status, cardiac health issues, obesity, cancer, immune-compromised, etc. Results Estimates assume good general health and no significant co-morbidities as stated earlier. In Table 2 , the "Likely Outcome" column study calculates for the scenario where there are known to be a few infected within any given social setting. In a real population that has, for example only a 100 per 100,000 population infectionrate, that "Likely Outcome" would have a 1 in 1000 chance of occurring. In the other 999 of 1000 cases, since no-one is infected, no-one can become infected, so the result is Not Ill. This study does NOT consider that 1 in 1000 probability that lowers the probability of becoming ill in a "real life scenario". The estimates in this study consider the case of any number of healthy individuals being within 2 to 4.8 meters of 2 definitely infected individuals (the hospital reference case used as the baseline for all estimates) so that a "worst case probability" scenario can be estimated. The probability of infection could be computed separately based on "local infection rates" and then further adjusted based on the Illness "Likely Outcome" for any given exposure period. All estimates are subject to prior mentioned limitations. All times are specified as Days:Hours:Minutes. The term "Office" implies a room with 6 air exchanges per hour (ACPH) as Table 2 defines unless otherwise noted. All other aspects can be also observed in Table 2 and prior commentary. As mentioned in the "Mask Usage" section, the term "mask" refers to a surgical mask. From Table 2 , many personal and business scenarios can be considered. The border between "Not Ill" and "Minor Illness" can help determine risk profile for virtually any scenario. The term "Mild Illness" is a clinical definition, and for COVID-19 can mean quite unpleasant flu-like symptoms including fatigue, fever, chills, muscle aches, headache, sorethroat, etc. that would not require hospitalization. The definitions of Moderate and Severe mean they most often require clinical attention and/or hospitalization. "Minor Illness" can mean "common-cold" like symptoms or slightly worse but not full "Flu Like" symptoms which is defined by "Mild Illness". The COVID-19 Moderate and Severe cases are referred to in Table 2 as "Possible Severe Illness". See the "Known Challenge Dose" section for more detail. To help clarify Table 2 , here are a few observations that might be made: A person wearing a mask doing light work (Light Active) near a COVID-19 hospital patient (SickHospPt, COVID) wearing a surgical mask in a 6 ACPH patient room may encounter enough exposure to develop a Minor Illness in a 49 minute period (0:00:49); but would likely not develop Mild Illness "flu like" symptoms unless in that environment for over 8 hours (0:08:14). Using N-95 and other improved PPE would have the effect of increasing those estimates. It is possible that immunity may begin developing at even shorter intervals. It is possible that by rotating medical staff work through COVID-19 patient areas at exposure intervals below the low end of this range several days apart and monitoring antibody test levels could help provide a path to immunity and increased ability to work with increasing exposure level environments without illness. Encountering short to increasing length exposures and avoiding lengthy exposures until antibody test titers become strongly positive may be a path to avoiding healthcare staff illness. It is likely several shortterm exposures separated by several days will increase antibody test titers, and as they reach protective thresholds, longer exposures would likely increase those antibody test titers to a level of sterilizing immunity. Repeat exposure would likely maintain that sterilizing immunity indefinitely. Having non-immune medical staff avoid lengthy exposure to patients that have high shedding potential based on Ct counts could also help avoid medical staff illness. both wearing masks, would likely result in those within a few meters becoming infected. With better ventilation at 24 ACPH, this would likely extend to more than 32 hours (1:08:59). People not wearing masks doing light work in a 3 MPH open area outdoor breeze with a pre-symptomatic individual nearby would likely not encounter enough exposure to become ill until after over 20 straight hours (0:20:22). People not wearing masks doing heavy exercise in a 3 MPH open area outdoor wind with a sick individual nearby may encounter enough exposure to develop a Minor Illness "cold like" in around 3 hours (0:03:03). People not wearing masks in a typical 6 ACPH office with a pre-symptomatic individual nearby would remain Not Ill in an encounter that is less than 6 minutes. In the scenario of a hair-styling appointment, if done within a common 6 ACPH indoor environment with no-one wearing masks and a pre-symptomatic person, Minor Illness might occur in around 1 hour (0:01:09), whereas that would extend to (0:04:37) in a 24 ACPH environment, which would significantly reduce the chance of illness in a 1 hour appointment. Wearing masks would further improve the likelihood of being Not Ill. In the 24 ACPH environment with masks even with a sick person, the other person would likely remain Not Ill after 19 minutes (0:0:19). In the scenario of a 2 hour movie at a theatre in a 24 ACPH environment without masks and with pre-symptomatic persons, Minor Illness might occur in around 4 hours (0:04:37). If masks were used, even if a sick person were present, Minor Illness might occur in 0:03:17. Not wearing a mask and being in proximity to a sick person indoors for 5 minutes could result in Minor Illness. Extending that to 52 minutes could result in Mild Illness. Passing them briefly for less than a minute would likely leave one Not Ill. This scales to hours and days when outdoors -certainly of no concern for brief encounters -even without a mask. Regarding brief encounters, keeping calm and moving along works even when around people who are known to be sick. For pre-symptomatics and when wearing masks, these numbers scale accordingly to even longer periods of safety -see Table 2 . Again, in a "real life" scenario, the probability of infection described above is on the order of 1 in 1000 when there is a 100 per 100,000 population infection-rate. It is noteworthy that once an individual has reached a target exposure level, the individual should attempt to eliminate further exposure for several days to a week so that the adaptive immune system can respond to the exposure before encountering additional exposure. General immunology and the Influenza A Challenge study referenced earlier has demonstrated that a person becoming sick begins to lightly shed virus about 2 days prior to symptoms and rapidly ramps infectivity to a peak that occurs about 1 day after symptoms begin; whereupon a normal immune system responds to reduce infectivity within a few days to a week or so of symptom onset. This may depend upon general individual health and care in using optimal balances of rest and light exercise during recovery. Some youth and extreme athletes are able to knock down illness within hours or a couple of days. By knowing the type of individual that is most likely to be encountered (pre-symptomatic or sick) and the likelihood of encountering an ill person (e.g. 1 in 1000 or Confirmed Sick), one may discover a time limit estimate that meets one's personal risk tolerance. It is important to keep in mind that these are estimates and the actual times could vary widely based on a large number of factors that even include amount of sleep, eating habits, exercise, and other factors too numerous to express. Personal, business, and public health guidelines must consider many factors including number of active infections per capita, general area population density, specific environment occupancy, temperature, respiration rates, loudness of vocal activation, general population health, etc. Table 2 , the studies that feed it, and other related studies, may help determine reasonable health guidelines and be useful to the general public in setting individual risk tolerances. All rights reserved. No reuse allowed without permission. (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. The copyright holder for this preprint this version posted October 5, 2020. . Businesses may benefit from having this study's actionable quantitative estimates inform specific business decisions including ventilation enhancement opportunities. Given diverse business environmental characteristics and the limitations of this study, it is recommended that this study help inform local entity specific and personal / individual decisions. It is not intended for use in specifying government policy. For example, a person in excellent health who rapidly and fully recovered from COVID-19 would likely select different conditions than those in other categories. Every person's risk tolerance and optimal exposure level is different. Those already recovered may benefit from light rechallenges that preserve antibody titer levels and related sterilizing immunity 21 . Every business building has attributes that may favor applying different estimates. Importantly, those with co-morbidities that place them at high-risk for a severe case should target zero exposure. People who attend to these high-risk individuals should use similar precaution. Those who are at lower risk for a severe case and are not in contact with high-risk individuals could opt for a more "normal" lifestyle and use Table 2 to guide them. One intent of this study is to identify the estimated conceptual boundaries for "Not Ill" and "Minor Illness" (Table 2) so that the "generally healthy" population that is at low-risk for a severe case could generally gravitate toward those goals such that they avoid illness and perhaps gain some level of progressive immunity during an outbreak. Those who have already recovered from an outbreak could select boundaries that are more-likely to help them maintain immunity without being exposed to an excessively strong (or weak) re-challenge. In healthy individuals, properly timed and dosed re-challenges can be helpful to maintain sterilizing immunity that protects those not yet infected during months-long outbreaks 22 . Estimates such as these, especially when the accuracy is improved through similar future studies, provide the structure for a powerful 21 st century data-science-based methodology for avoiding illness and maximizing immune response. Raising public understanding and consciousness of concepts such as "viral load", "exposure time", "challenge dose levels", "shedding quantities", "immune seroconversion", and "re-challenge" can achieve new levels of personal hygiene that exceed centuries-old adages such as "wash your hands". It is possible future generations would have basic knowledge most of the world never imagined in the 20 th century and prior. If every high-school student read and was tested on content similar to this study as part of a health class assignment, a tremendous step forward would accompany the next generation. The authors performed all work on this study without compensation as an act of good will and statesmanship and have no beneficial affiliations with any institutions related to the work. All rights reserved. No reuse allowed without permission. (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. The copyright holder for this preprint this version posted October 5, 2020. . https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.10.03.20206110 doi: medRxiv preprint While the estimates in this study cannot be considered authoritative due to estimation limitations, they offer considerably greater resolution and accuracy than WHO and CDC recommendations such as "6 feet of distance" and "use facial coverings" which do not differentiate between exposure periods and environments. The estimates in this study could be a significant improvement over current WHO and CDC guidelines in that they provide specific quantitative number estimates extrapolated from peer-reviewed studies for various environments. The various environments include typical ASHEAE office ventilation standards, one example of dramatically improved ventilation (4x), and outdoor 3 MPH conditions. The estimates also consider the infected person as either very sick or pre-symptomatic, the level of exertion of those breathing in vicinity of the infected, and various likely outcomes from Not Ill to Possible Severe Illness. This study considers aerosolized transmission at a distance of > 2 meters. The estimations in the table focus on aerosolized transmission and do not consider the case of droplet or fomite (surface contact) based transmission which can be averted through some distance, barriers, socially hygienic behavior (not sneezing at your neighbor), handwashing, and other non-PPE / mask interventions. While the reader may personally choose to consider the estimates for personal, business, and other guidelines, they have no merit of accuracy, assurance, guarantee, medical efficacy, or legal standing. In the absence of better information, these estimates should be considered only with additional good judgement and after further verification. Human response to pathogens is widely variant and these estimations assume the normal healthy population with better than average immune response and no co-morbidities. Any application of these estimates is at the risk of those applying them. There may be unforeseen errors in the estimation, extrapolation, and underlying study interpretation. There may be errors in the referenced studies. No liability may be assumed or implied. The primary purpose of this study is academic, theoretically didactive, and abstractly educational. It should be considered a simple example of estimation methods but not an authoritative reference. Choice to observe any of its specific results or commentary belong solely to the reader. As additional data becomes available, this study could be revised to reference and include that additional data. The estimation methods used in this study could also be improved. Together, additional data and improved estimation methods could be used to revise the spreadsheet that makes the objective computations found in Table 2 . Future studies could improve models and estimation accuracy. While the values in Table 2 are specific, they cannot be relied upon as accurate. This study is intended to be an early prototype of what could be accomplished going forward. It is believed similar but unreleased studies with these improvements already exist but have not yet been published and widely distributed to the public. It is hoped that publication of this study accelerates publication and widedistribution of similar, yet superior, studies. AA, President, Inflection Technologies Corporation Computer Science, magna cum laude, Application Developer at Tahoe Blue Ltd Validation of the wild-type influenza a human challenge model H1N1pdMIST: an A(H1N1) pdm09 dose-finding investigational new drug study Viable SARS-CoV-2 in the air of a hospital room with COVID-19 patients Airborne Transmission of SARS-CoV-2: Theoretical Considerations and Available Evidence Probable Evidence of Fecal Aerosol Transmission of SARS-CoV-2 in a High-Rise Building Validation of the wild-type influenza A human challenge model H1N1pdMIST: an A(H1N1)pdm09 dose-finding investigational new drug study A Dose-finding Study of a Wild-type Influenza A(H3N2) Virus in a Healthy Volunteer Human Challenge Model Validation of the wild-type influenza A human challenge model H1N1pdMIST: an A(H1N1)pdm09 dose-finding investigational new drug study Viable SARS-CoV-2 in the air of a hospital room with COVID-19 patients Influenza virus aerosols in human exhaled breath: particle size, cultur-ability, and effect of surgical masks