June 2020 |
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What Labs Can Teach us About Safely Returning to Offices We only need to recognize that from now on all environments are critical environments, and that schools, offices and other buildings can and should be made as safe and healthy as the best hospitals or laboratories are at present. |
Dan Diehl, CEO of Aircuity |
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The
COVID-19 pandemic has forced countries and companies around the world
to think deeply about the health and safety of their people. It is
morally and economically essential that, as employees begin to emerge
from lock-downs, they can be confident that their offices and places of
work are equipped to minimize the risks of infection. The bad news is
that our built environment is not nearly as effective as it could be in
keeping people safe, healthy and productive. The good news is that the
technology we need to solve this problem already exists and is widely
used in laboratories, hospitals and other critical environments.
Research has shown that buildings with poor indoor air quality
(inadequate ventilation, filtration or humidity control) can promote
the spread of airborne bacterial or viral infections. This is not a new
phenomenon. In 1976 there was an outbreak of Legionnaire’s Disease in
Philadelphia, caused by bacterial infiltration of a hotel air
conditioning system. That outbreak led to a revolution in the design
and regulation of HVAC systems. Today, the evidence of airborne spread
of the novel coronavirus in poorly-ventilated buildings calls for a
similar re-examination of how we manage indoor environmental quality.
As Dr. Joseph Allen of the Harvard Chan School of Public Health said
recently, “Your building manager has more impact on your health than
your doctor.”
Managing the built environment to control humidity, ventilation and
optimal filtration has long been much harder than it should be. The
data show that many systems do not meet the needs of building occupants
because of poor design, maintenance or operation. Fortunately, in
recent years we have seen great improvement on these fronts in critical
environments such as hospitals, vivariums and laboratories, with
measurably better results for health and the bottom line. Higher
outside air change rates, matching airflows to occupancy, and improved
filtration methods can reduce the concentration of airborne virus
particles. Accurate measurement and control systems can maintain proper
indoor humidity, mitigating the spread of the novel coronavirus and
other RNA viruses, and additional measures such as UV coil treatment
can further reduce the potential for viral and bacterial transmission
in air streams. Better data management protocols allow building
managers to improve efficiency and effectiveness by targeting
air-quality measures exactly where they are needed.
The Smart Labs program, created by UC Irvine with support from
Aircuity, and subsequently adopted by the University of Pennsylvania,
Michigan State, Arizona State, and Eli Lilly, has proven that these
advanced technologies make buildings more efficient, safer, and smarter
than they were previously. Those technologies and related best
practices can now be put to wider use in all kinds of environments,
through both new construction and the retrofit of existing buildings.
[an error occurred while processing this directive]People
are very rightly demanding that, as they return to work, they do so in
buildings that are as healthy as possible. We have all the necessary
tools to give them that assurance. We only need to recognize that from
now on all environments are critical environments, and that schools,
offices and other buildings can and should be made as safe and healthy
as the best hospitals or laboratories are at present. Ensuring optimal
indoor environmental quality thus has a vital part to play in the
immediate recovery from the pandemic, by minimizing the risks of indoor
virus transmission and cutting exposure to the chemicals being used in
enhanced cleaning regimes. It will build employee confidence and speed
economic recovery.
Implementation of such measures requires investment, but in the new
post-pandemic era it will be an unavoidable requirement for doing
business. Fortunately, these Smart IEQ systems deliver additional
benefits including environmental sustainability as well as support for
employee (or student) general wellness, productivity and cognitive
function, resulting in an excellent return on investment.
To ensure that all buildings are healthy, productive and safe we need a
comprehensive strategy, built upon a solid foundation of existing and
proven technology, and drawing on local and international expertise.
Such a strategy will ensure that, instead of spreading infections and
distress, the built environment actively helps its inhabitants to
achieve their full potential. The disruption of the present crisis,
while we are re-thinking some fundamental tenets of how we live and
work together, is the perfect time to begin.
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