For years, Peter Merriman has been concerned about viruses like the flu spreading through the air of his restaurants.

So even before the pandemic, Merriman鈥檚 restaurant in Kakaako has pumped in enough outdoor air to turn it over 24 times per hour 鈥 more air exchanges than the standard hospital operating room.听

More recently, he invested in carbon dioxide monitors and ultraviolet disinfection lights for the Oahu restaurant鈥檚 HVAC system, plus HEPA filters and carbon dioxide monitors at his Waimea location on Hawaii Island. His other two restaurants on Kauai and Maui are both open-air.听

Merriman said he ramped up the measures after reading in the news about how COVID-19 can spread through the air.听

鈥淲e don’t want to get people sick,鈥 he said.听

Merriman鈥檚 restaurant sign 鈥楴o Mask No service鈥 at the entrance area during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Merriman鈥檚 restaurant in Kakaako runs more air exchanges per hour than the typical operating room. Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2021

But when it comes to airflow, Merriman鈥檚 is the exception. Most Hawaii restaurants are not taking steps to promote ventilation and filtration, according to a Hawaii Restaurant Association board member, and they aren鈥檛 required to do so.听

City and state health guidelines don鈥檛 indicate that ventilation and filtration should be a priority. Addressing airborne transmission is framed as an option, not as an obligation or requirement.听

Experts say that鈥檚 a mistake.听

鈥淭here are thousands of superspreading events, and they are all the same thing: People in a room with poor ventilation breathing the same air, talking for a long time,鈥 said Jose-Luis Jimenez, a chemistry professor at the University of Colorado Boulder who studies aerosols.听

鈥淎nd restaurants are among the prime locations.鈥

Cheesecake Factory located in Waikiki during COVID-19 pandemic. Sign reads, 鈥楧ining Room Now Open鈥 during pandemic. July 10, 2020
Staying six feet apart isn’t enough to eliminate the risk of COVID-19 spread, experts say. Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2020

As Honolulu allows businesses to reopen and indoor dining returns to full capacity 鈥 allowing people to sit among strangers, unmasked, for hours at a time in an enclosed space 鈥 there needs to be a greater focus on addressing the viral threat in the air.

That鈥檚 according to a half dozen scientists interviewed for this story who are experts in the areas of epidemiology, virology, aerosols, ventilation and public health.听

While people are letting their guard down, the pandemic isn鈥檛 over, they said. Hawaii鈥檚 case counts are holding steady as vaccinations are underway, but it鈥檚 not yet clear how much protection the inoculation offers that have already been detected on the islands.听

Hawaii should respond to COVID-19 like a person taking antibiotics, Jimenez said. Even if you鈥檙e starting to feel better, you should continue with treatment.听

Otherwise, he said, you risk the infection coming back.

Public Health Agencies Slow To Acknowledge Airborne Spread

Much has been said about social distancing to avoid viral droplets, which can be coughed or sneezed to distances up to six feet.听

But there has been , which float like cigarette smoke in the air and can linger for hours.听

Numerous studies suggest COVID-19 spreads this way. One early and memorable example was that sickened dozens of people and killed two.听

A more recent study of a cluster in a Honolulu gym concluded that . The study, conducted by Hawaii鈥檚 Department of Health and the CDC, recommended mask use (which wasn鈥檛 required at the time of the cluster) and improved ventilation.

Mayor Rick Blangiardi flashes a shaka after the press conference announcing new COVID-19 informational banners that will installed along Kalakaua Avenue. February 11, 2021
Mayor Rick Blangiardi and other officials have promoted the need for mask-wearing and social distancing but have said little about the need to address airborne transmission. Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2021

Understanding how the virus spreads is crucial because it impacts how we address it, experts said. Social distancing, plexiglass barriers, and disinfected surfaces are not sufficient to address airborne transmission and in some cases represent 鈥溾 more than real mitigation measures, according to experts.听

If the overall system in place is just cycling poor air over and over again, all the plexiglass in the world isn鈥檛 going to help,鈥 said Thomas Lee, a University of Hawaii epidemiology professor.听

To combat a virus that spreads through aerosols, it鈥檚 important to ventilate 鈥 bring outside air inside 鈥 and/or filter the viral particles out of the air, experts said.听

And yet the World Health Organization and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have been slow to acknowledge the threat of airborne transmission of COVID-19.听

The WHO only acknowledged that COVID-19 can hang suspended in the air in July, after to revise its guidance. The CDC didn鈥檛 address airborne transmission until October, after it guidance stating that aerosols were the main mode of transmission.听

In contrast, Japan and made it a centerpiece of its public health message to avoid : closed spaces, crowded places and close-contact settings.听

Even recently in the U.S., public health agencies still have not made airborne transmission a focus of public messaging in the way that hand-washing and social distancing have been, and scientists continue to speak out.听

Last month, 13 experts, some of whom have advised President Joe Biden, sent the president a letter calling for the for indoor settings like meatpacking plans and prisons.听

鈥淚t鈥檚 time to stop pussyfooting around the fact that the virus is transmitted mostly through the air,鈥 Linsey Marr, an aerosols expert at Virginia Tech who signed the letter, told .

鈥淚f we properly acknowledge this, and get the right recommendations and guidance into place, this is our chance to end the pandemic in the next six months 鈥 If we don鈥檛 do this, it could very well drag on.鈥

Dr. Sarah Kemble, the acting state epidemiologist, co-authored a recent study on a COVID-19 cluster and recommended improved ventilation. However, that advice is not easily found on DOH’s website. Eleni Avenda帽o/Civil Beat/2020

Jimenez believes the hesitancy to acknowledge airborne spread is based in the scientific community鈥檚 strongly held belief that germs are mainly transmitted through contaminated people and objects, not through the air.听

That concept dates back over 100 years and contributed to a culture in which the is akin to a prosecutor overcoming reasonable doubt in a trial, Jimenez said.听

鈥淚t鈥檚 a historical error that affects the field of public health and epidemiology,鈥 he said.听

Throughout the pandemic, state and local agencies have followed the lead of the CDC and WHO.听

Neither the City and County of Honolulu nor the state require anything of businesses or other indoor facilities when it comes to air quality during the pandemic.听

Hawaii DOH鈥檚 webpage on 鈥溾 makes no mention of airborne transmission or avoiding shared air.听

Instead, it promotes disinfection of surfaces, which might be helpful advice if COVID-19 spread primarily through contaminated objects. , according to scientific evidence. The CDC .听

The Hawaii Department of Health sent Civil Beat a list of its recommendations on air quality, but Civil Beat was unable to locate that language anywhere on the internet. Asked where the information is posted, a DOH spokesman did not respond.听聽

Lt. Gov. Josh Green, an emergency room doctor and Hawaii’s COVID-19 medical liaison, referred questions about the lack of state standards to DOH.听

Honolulu鈥檚 OneOahu.org makes no mention of ventilation in its guidance for specific sectors like restaurants, gyms or spiritual services. The topic is only mentioned on a general that offers some 鈥渉elpful tips鈥 and links to the CDC鈥檚 website.听

Zippy鈥檚 Restaurant located near Washington Middle School.
When it comes to indoor dining, individuals have to decide whether they’re comfortable with the risk. Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2021

Civil Beat requested interviews with the Hawaii Department of Health and Mayor Rick Blangiardi鈥檚 administration to discuss why airborne transmission isn鈥檛 a greater focus of its public health messaging. Both declined to make anyone available to discuss it.听

To ensure widespread masking and social distancing, the city took a hard-line stance under Mayor Kirk Caldwell, issuing tens of thousands of criminal citations to enforce rules last year. Those rules, minus the enforcement, are still in place under Blangiardi.

But when it comes to airborne transmission, individuals are faced with deciding for themselves what is safe and what is not.听

鈥淚f a customer does not feel comfortable dining inside a restaurant, there are other available options including takeout, delivery or choosing another restaurant,鈥 Tim Sakahara, the mayor鈥檚 communications director, said in an emailed statement.听

But without clear standards set by public health experts, the average person may not be aware of the risk they鈥檙e taking when spending time in an indoor setting, said F. DeWolfe Miller, an infectious disease epidemiologist at the University of Hawaii.听

鈥淚 can protect myself by making an informed choice about where I go and eat,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 think there still needs to be more messaging on this issue for people, so they can make an informed consent.鈥

‘It’s A Political Decision’聽

Meanwhile, several other jurisdictions have taken steps to address ventilation through incentives and requirements.听

Michigan has a . It rewards restaurants with a certificate to display to customers demonstrating that the establishment has been reviewed by an HVAC inspector and that the restaurant has implemented recommendations on air circulation.

San Francisco says businesses “must set up as much airflow as possible to be open to the public.” sf.gov

San Francisco is requiring all businesses to marking off which ventilation measures it has taken. Businesses can choose from three strategies: follow HVAC standards, get a portable air cleaner for each room or keep all windows and doors open.听

This month, Georgia鈥檚 Republican governor signed an executive order ordering restaurants and other businesses to .听

Washington state restaurants can if they maintain levels of carbon dioxide that are comparable to outside.听聽

And Philadelphia won鈥檛 even let its restaurants open to 50% capacity unless they can at least 15 times per hour 鈥 a move that caused restaurant owners to

Sarah Nguyen, who co-owns The Pizza Press in Pearl City, said she isn鈥檛 aware of many restaurants here making efforts to increase ventilation and filtration, but she considers the existing rules about masking and distancing to be 鈥渧ery strict.鈥澛

鈥淭he tables are sanitized. We have signs everywhere with 鈥楽tay 6 feet apart.鈥 No one’s allowed to come in without a mask. Our employees have masks,鈥 said Nguyen, a member of the Hawaii Restaurant Association board. 鈥淪o people are feeling more comfortable.鈥澛

With businesses in such financial straits from the past year of closures and Hawaii鈥檚 declining case counts, Nguyen said she doesn鈥檛 see a need for additional requirements for ventilation or filtration.听聽

鈥淎s far as the direction (we鈥檙e going in) and opening up, that鈥檚 not a concern for me,鈥 she said.听

But health experts say Hawaii should consider implementing some standards and requirements. Whether that actually happens comes down to how policy makers want to balance public health and economic demands, Jimenez said.听

鈥淚t鈥檚 a political decision,鈥 he said.听

Merriman鈥檚 restaurant CO2 meter.
Merriman鈥檚 restaurant recently installed a CO2 meter. Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2021

In Jimenez鈥檚 opinion, businesses should be required to have carbon dioxide detectors, which can track how much exhaled air is in a room. Indoor spaces should stay below 700 parts per million, he said, and readings can be displayed on TVs for everyone to see with carbon dioxide levels color-coded by level of risk. The technology was used at a pop concert in Tokyo last year, according to .听

He recommends devices that offer non-dispersive infrared sensing, which retail for $100 to $200. It鈥檚 an investment he said businesses like restaurants should be eager to embrace because they stand to lose a lot more if cases increase.听

If there is a spike in cases and restaurants “have to reduce capacity to 50%, you鈥檙e talking about much, much more money than $200 per restaurant,鈥 he said, adding that improving air quality can help mitigate future disease outbreaks.听

鈥淚t鈥檚 not just something we should do for the next few months. It鈥檚 something we should do now and keep doing forever.鈥澛

Multiple layers of protection help to fortify the response to the pandemic, Jimenez said, citing Each incomplete layer of protection, when combined with other layers, improves the chances of reducing transmission.听

Other layers are wearing a tight-fitting, high-filtration mask, keeping your distance from others, limiting your time with others, and filtering the air, either with a building鈥檚 HVAC system or via portable filters.

Ventilation and filtration should be used 鈥渆verywhere where we share air,鈥 Jimenez said. That includes households where family members are going to school or work with other people during the day and returning home to family at night, he said.

L. James Lo, an expert on ventilation at Drexel University in Philadelphia, said it鈥檚 important that air quality standards be developed in a way that takes a building鈥檚 structural characteristics into consideration.

For example, a mandate requiring a certain number of air exchanges would be impossible for some buildings鈥 HVAC systems to meet, he said. In those cases, facilities could be required to meet the highest level of ventilation that their system allows, according to Lo, and ventilation should be done in conjunction with air filtration.

At a minimum, Lo said businesses should be required to keep their windows and doors open.听

He likes the Michigan model in which restaurants get a stamp of approval from air quality experts.

鈥淭he key thing here is to let the consumer and the general public have a very direct and very fast way to differentiate between places,鈥 he said.

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