Current:Home > InvestHow long does COVID live on surfaces? Experts answer your coronavirus FAQs. -AssetVision
How long does COVID live on surfaces? Experts answer your coronavirus FAQs.
View
Date:2025-04-19 01:48:40
Around the globe, a new strain of COVID-19 is spreading exponentially.
The COVID-19 XEC variant is derived from Omicron strains KS.1.1 and KP.3.3, says Dr. Francesca Torriani, MD, an infectious disease specialist with UC San Diego Health. XEC was first detected in Europe earlier this year, and it's now reached the US. “We expect this could become the next dominant variant,” she says.
As health officials prepare for a potential uptick in COVID-19 cases this fall, we asked the experts to answer your FAQs. From understanding how COVID-19 is transmitted, to what precautions you should take to protect yourself from the virus, here’s what you need to know.
How is COVID transmitted?
So far, it is understood that the XEC variant behaves similarly to other strains of the virus, Torriani says.
Exposure to COVID-19 is most likely to occur when you are in close proximity to someone who is infected with the virus, because “the main mode of transmission is through respiratory particles,” says Torriani.
When an infected person speaks, coughs or sneezes, they send infectious particles and droplets of respiratory fluid into the air, according to the United States Environmental Protection Agency. When you inhale these particles through your nose or mouth, or get them in your eyes, there is “a possibility of the virus entering the body,” Torriani says.
Because COVID-19 particles can linger in the air, transmission of the virus is still possible at distances greater than 6 feet, per the EPA. Depending on the ventilation, COVID-19 particles can stay airborne anywhere from a few minutes to a few hours, says Dr. Nezar Dahdal, Hospitalist at Banner Thunderbird Medical Center.
How long does COVID live on surfaces?
While surface transmission of COVID is possible, it is less likely than transmission by inhaling infected respiratory particles. The live virus cannot survive on surfaces for long, because “the virus needs a host to actually be effective,” Dahdal explains. “It needs to be in the human body to multiply and spread.”
In the event that you do touch a surface that is contaminated with live COVID-19 droplets, if proceed to touch your nose, eyes, or mouth, you are “taking the virus from the surface and transferring it to your mucous membrane, where it then enters your system,” Dahdal says.
On “surfaces such as glass, or tabletops, or steel, the virus can last outside of the human body anywhere from one day to about four or five days, depending on how porous it is,” Dahdal says. The virus can survive on cardboard surfaces up to one day, and on wood surfaces up to four days, per Cleveland Clinic.
Can you live with someone with COVID and not get it?
It is possible to live in close contact with someone with COVID, be exposed to the virus, and not necessarily get infected, Dahdal says. It’s “going to depend on a person's immune system, the variant itself, and then also the sanitary practices of the person,” he says.
When living in close proximity with someone infected with COVID, the key to avoiding infection is to be proactive about protection, he says. “If a person is frequently washing their hands, sanitizing their hands, wiping down or [disinfecting] surfaces, you have a much better chance of avoiding being infected,” Dahdal says.
How to prevent the spread of COVID
Washing hands, wearing masks, and frequently sanitizing surfaces are simple measures that can limit the possibility of being exposed to COVID-19, Dahdal says.
It’s also important to stay up to date on COVID vaccines, especially if you are immunocompromised or aged 65 and older, he emphasizes.
There is a question of whether the updated COVID vaccine will offer protection against XEC. Because the latest vaccine targets circulating variants of Omicron, it should “also provide coverage and [decrease] the risk of complications in people who get infected,” Torriani says.
More:Free COVID-19 tests are now available. Here's how you can get them.
Additional precautions against COVID include keeping windows open to promote airflow, and when possible, spending time with people outside rather than indoors, Torriani says. This “increases the turnover of the air, and therefore decreases the number of particles that might be still in the air that we might inhale,” she explains.
veryGood! (862)
Related
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Man filmed wielding folding chair in riverfront brawl pleads guilty to misdemeanor
- The mother of imprisoned drug lord Joaquin ‘El Chapo’ Guzmán is reported dead in Mexico
- The mother of imprisoned drug lord Joaquin ‘El Chapo’ Guzmán is reported dead in Mexico
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Fantasy football winners, losers: Chase Brown making case for more touches
- Person of interest arrested in slaying of Detroit synagogue president
- Narges Mohammadi, Iranian activist and Nobel peace prize winner, to go on new hunger strike as prize is awarded
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Hasbro cuts 1,100 jobs, or 20% of its workforce, prompted by the ongoing malaise in the toy business
Ranking
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- California hiker rescued after 7 hours pinned beneath a boulder that weighed at least 6,000 pounds
- How to watch The Game Awards 2023, the biggest night in video gaming
- A countdown to climate action
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Nebraska priest killed after church assault; suspect is in custody, officials say
- California hiker rescued after 7 hours pinned beneath a boulder that weighed at least 6,000 pounds
- Putin visits a shipyard to oversee the commissioning of new Russian nuclear submarines
Recommendation
Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
Corner collapses at six-story Bronx apartment building, leaving apartments exposed
Los Angeles Lakers to hang 'unique' NBA In-Season Tournament championship banner
Two Georgia election workers sue Giuliani for millions, alleging he took their good names
Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
George Santos is in plea negotiations with federal prosecutors
Allies of imprisoned Kremlin foe Navalny sound the alarm, say they haven’t heard from him in 6 days
War-wracked Myanmar is now the world’s top opium producer, surpassing Afghanistan, says UN agency