https://www.nytimes.com./2020/04/01/opinion/coronavirus-viral-dose.html

These Coronavirus Exposures Might Be the Most Dangerous

As with any other poison, viruses are usually deadlier in larger amounts.

By Joshua D. Rabinowitz and Caroline R. Bartman

Dr. Rabinowitz is a professor of chemistry and genomics. Dr. Bartman is a 
genomic researcher.

Li Wenliang, the doctor in China who raised early awareness of the new 
coronavirus, died of the virus in February at 34. His death was shocking not 
only because of his role in publicizing the developing epidemic but also — 
given that young people do not have a high risk of dying from Covid-19 — 
because of his age.

Is it possible that Dr. Li died because as a doctor who spent a lot of time 
around severely ill Covid-19 patients, he was infected with such a high dose? 
After all, though he was one of the first young health care workers to die 
after being exposed up close and frequently to the virus, he was unfortunately 
not the last.

The importance of viral dose is being overlooked in discussions of the 
coronavirus. As with any other poison, viruses are usually more dangerous in 
larger amounts. Small initial exposures tend to lead to mild or asymptomatic 
infections, while larger doses can be lethal.

From a policy perspective, we need to consider that not all exposures to the 
coronavirus may be the same. Stepping into an office building that once had 
someone with the coronavirus in it is not as dangerous as sitting next to that 
infected person for an hourlong train commute.

This may seem obvious, but many people are not making this distinction. We need 
to focus more on preventing high-dose infection.

Both small and large amounts of virus can replicate within our cells and cause 
severe disease in vulnerable individuals such as the immunocompromised. In 
healthy people, however, immune systems respond as soon as they sense a virus 
growing inside. Recovery depends on which wins the race: viral spread or immune 
activation.

Virus experts know that viral dose affects illness severity. In the lab, mice 
receiving a low dose of virus clear it and recover, while the same virus at a 
higher dose kills them. Dose sensitivity has been observed for every common 
acute viral infection that has been studied in lab animals, including 
coronaviruses.

Humans also exhibit sensitivity to viral dose. Volunteers have allowed 
themselves to be exposed to low or high doses of relatively benign viruses 
causing colds or diarrhea. Those receiving the low doses have rarely developed 
visible signs of infection, while high doses have typically led to infections 
and more severe symptoms.

It would be unethical to experimentally manipulate viral dose in humans for a 
pathogen as serious as the coronavirus, but there is evidence that dose also 
matters for the human coronavirus. During the 2003 SARS coronavirus outbreak in 
Hong Kong, for instance, one patient infected many others living in the same 
complex of apartment buildings, resulting in 19 dead. The spread of infection 
is thought to have been caused by airborne viral particles that were blown 
throughout the complex from the initial patient’s apartment unit. As a result 
of greater viral exposure, neighbors who lived in the same building were not 
only more frequently infected but also more likely to die. By contrast, more 
distant neighbors, even when infected, suffered less.

Low-dose infections can even engender immunity, protecting against high-dose 
exposures in the future. Before the invention of vaccines, doctors often 
intentionally infected healthy individuals with fluid from smallpox pustules. 
The resulting low-dose infections were unpleasant but generally survivable, and 
they prevented worse incidents of disease when those individuals were later 
exposed to smallpox in uncontrolled amounts.

Despite the evidence for the importance of viral dose, many of the 
epidemiological models being used to inform policy during this pandemic ignore 
it. This is a mistake.

People should take particular care against high-dose exposures, which are most 
likely to occur in close in-person interactions — such as coffee meetings, 
crowded bars and quiet time in a room with Grandma — and from touching our 
faces after getting substantial amounts of virus on our hands. In-person 
interactions are more dangerous in enclosed spaces and at short distances, with 
dose escalating with exposure time. For transient interactions that violate the 
rule of maintaining six feet between you and others, such as paying a cashier 
at the grocery store, keep them brief — aim for “within six feet, only six 
seconds.”

Because dose matters, medical personnel face an extreme risk, since they deal 
with the sickest, highest-viral-load patients. We must prioritize protective 
gear for them.

For everyone else, the importance of social distancing, mask-wearing and good 
hygiene is only greater, since these practices not only decrease infectious 
spread but also tend to decrease dose and thus the lethalness of infections 
that do occur. While preventing viral spread is a societal good, avoiding 
high-dose infections is a personal imperative, even for young healthy people.

At the same time, we need to avoid a panicked overreaction to low-dose 
exposures. Clothing and food packaging that have been exposed to someone with 
the virus seem to present a low risk. Healthy people who are together in the 
grocery store or workplace experience a tolerable risk — so long as they take 
precautions like wearing surgical masks and spacing themselves out.

A complete lockdown of society is the most effective way to stop spread of the 
virus, but it is costly both economically and psychologically. When society 
eventually reopens, risk-reduction measures like maintaining personal space and 
practicing proper hand-washing will be essential to reducing high-dose 
infections. High-risk sites for high-dose exposure, like stadiums and 
convention venues, should remain shuttered. Risky but essential services like 
public transportation should be allowed to operate — but people must follow 
safety measures such as wearing masks, maintaining physical spacing and never 
commuting with a fever.

Now is the time to stay home. But hopefully this time will be brief. When we do 
begin to leave our homes again, let’s do it wisely, in light of the importance 
of viral dose.

Joshua D. Rabinowitz is a professor of chemistry and genomics at Princeton, 
where Caroline R. Bartman is a research fellow.

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