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Final Copy - The Potential for Transmission of Coronavirus via Sports Equipment; a Cricket Case Study.pdf (583.84 kB)

The potential for transmission of Coronaviruses via sports equipment; A cricket case study

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journal contribution
posted on 2021-08-06, 13:33 authored by Rory England, N Peirce, J Torresi, Sean MitchellSean Mitchell, Andy HarlandAndy Harland
A review of literature on the role of fomites in transmission of coronaviruses informed the development of a framework which was used to qualitatively analyse a cricket case study, where equipment is shared and passed around, and identify potential mitigation strategies. A range of pathways were identified that might in theory allow coronavirus transmission from an infected person to a non-infected person via communal or personal equipment fomites or both. Eighteen percent of potential fomite based interactions were found to be non-essential to play including all contact with another persons equipment. Six opportunities to interrupt the transmission pathway were identified, including the recommendation to screen participants for symptoms prior to play. Social distancing between participants and avoiding unnecessary surface contact provides two opportunities; firstly to avoid equipment exposure to infected respiratory droplets and secondly to avoid uninfected participants touching potential fomites. Hand sanitisation and equipment sanitisation provide two further opportunities by directly inactivating coronavirus. Preventing players from touching their mucosal membranes with their hands represents the sixth potential interruption. Whilst potential fomite transmission pathways were identified, evidence suggests that viral load will be substantially reduced during surface transfer. Mitigation strategies could further reduce potential fomites, suggesting that by comparison, direct airborne transmission presents the greater risk in cricket.

Funding

England and Wales Cricket Board

History

School

  • Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering

Published in

International Journal of Sports Medicine

Volume

42

Issue

12

Pages

1058-1069

Publisher

Thieme

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Rights holder

© Thieme

Publisher statement

This paper was accepted for publication in the journal International Journal of Sports Medicine and the definitive published version is available https://doi.org/10.1055/a-1500-4620

Acceptance date

2021-05-11

Publication date

2021-07-12

Copyright date

2021

ISSN

0172-4622

eISSN

1439-3964

Language

  • en

Depositor

Prof Andy Harland. Deposit date: 2 August 2021