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The Stability of Model Human Coronaviruses on Textiles in the Environment and during Health Care Laundering

Lucy Owen, Maitreyi Shivkumar, Katie Laird

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Abstract

Synthetic textiles such as polyester could potentially act as fomites of human coronaviruses, indicating the importance of infection control procedures during handling of contaminated textiles prior to laundering. This study provides novel evidence that human coronaviruses can persist on textiles for up to 3 days and are readily transferred from polyester textile to other surfaces after 72 h of incubation. This is of particular importance for the domestic laundering of contaminated textiles such as health care uniforms in the United Kingdom and United States, where there may be a risk of cross-contaminating the domestic environment. It was demonstrated that human coronaviruses are removed from contaminated textiles by typical domestic and commercial wash cycles, even at low temperatures without detergent, indicating that current health care laundering policies are likely sufficient in the decontamination of SARS-CoV-2 from textiles.

Topics & Concepts

TextileHuman healthCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)CoronavirusPolyesterSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)2019-20 coronavirus outbreakBusinessVirologyMaterials scienceMedicineEnvironmental healthComposite materialPathologyInfectious disease (medical specialty)DiseaseOutbreakInfection Control and Ventilation
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