Grocery Shopping Coronavirus Safety – Supermarkets and COVID-19

If you’ve been to the grocery store during the coronavirus COVID-19, you’ve likely felt some mixture of anxiety, loneliness, fear, confusion, frustration, and maybe even paranoia.

And if you’ve turned to social media for help with grocery shopping during the coronavirus, you’ve likely also felt a mixture of all those things—except heightened twofold.

Take, for instance, the following YouTube video, created by Dr. Jeffrey VanWingen, who states he is a family physician in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

The video has been viewed more than 20 million times and has more than 20,000 comments. But how much truth is there to some of the claims made in this video?

  • Do you really need to leave your groceries in your trunk or garage for three days to prevent the spread of the coronavirus?
  • Do you need to spray bleach on products in order to preserve their safety?
  • And, as Dr. VanWingen instructs, must you wash certain types of produce in soapy water for 20 seconds?

To determine whether or not these statements—and others made on social media about supermarket shopping during COVID-19— are true, we turned to Chrysan Cronin, DrPH, MPH, a professor of public health at Muhlenberg College. She teaches Infectious Disease Epidemiology and Occupational and Environmental Health.

Her perspective will, hopefully, help to alleviate your mixture of anxiety, loneliness, fear, confusion, frustration, and maybe even paranoia.

Is it accurate to say that coronavirus can live in an aerosolized environment for three hours, on cardboard for one hour, and can live on plastic and metal surfaces for three days?

Dr. VanWingen states that this is true, according to a New England Journal of Medicine Study—except that it’s not the whole story.

“The NEJM article did report these findings,” Cronin says. “However, this information has been presented out of context.”

Cronin cites the work of Carolyn Machamer, a professor at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine who studies coronaviruses.

“The virus may last that long on surfaces, but there is only a very small percentage of viral particles left (less than 0.1%) after a few days, so it’s highly unlikely to cause infection,” Cronin says.

Plus, lab conditions are not supermarket conditions.

“Aerosolized particles that are used in lab studies are much lighter and smaller than what typically comes out of a person so they stay in the air longer than would normally occur in a non-experimental environment,” Cronin says.

Should people try to leave their groceries for three days in their car or garage in order to prevent the spread of COVID-19?

Paul Taylor

No.

“There is no evidence that suggests that the virus has been or can be transmitted from groceries. The probability of this is extremely low,” says Cronin.

So while grocery bags and groceries themselves may not be carriers of the virus, grocery shopping is still a situation where you may pick up or transmit the disease.

“Certainly following good hygiene habits is crucial. Don’t go shopping if you’re sick, wipe down the cart with a sanitizing wipe, wash or sanitize your hands when you’re done, and physically distance yourself from others as much as you can in the store,” says Cronin.

via Grocery Shopping Coronavirus Safety – Supermarkets and COVID-19