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Peer-Reviewed Research

Virus Cross-Transmission Through Sanitary Plumbing in Isolation Facilities

Cho et al., 2024 Sustainable Cities and Society Isolation Facilities Plumbing Networks

Key Takeaway

Smoke tracer experiments in an infectious disease isolation facility showed clear airflow through plumbing systems when room pressure differentials exceeded trap capacity. Conventional drain traps are inadequate for preventing plumbing-mediated virus transmission in facilities designed specifically for patient isolation.

The Study

Cho et al. investigated virus transmission potential through sanitary plumbing systems in an infectious disease isolation facility. Using smoke tracer experiments and computational fluid dynamics modeling, they examined conditions that enable viral movement through drainage and ventilation systems driven by room pressure differentials.

The results were direct and visual. Smoke introduced into drainage systems traveled upward through compromised trap seals and emerged into isolation rooms. The research demonstrated that negative or positive pressure differentials between isolation rooms and drainage systems create airflow through plumbing networks, enabling aerosol transport through vertical stacks and horizontal drains connecting multiple isolation units.

Key Findings

Pressure differentials drive plumbing transport

Room pressure differentials between isolation rooms and drainage systems create airflow through plumbing networks, enabling viral aerosol transport through vertical stacks and horizontal drains connecting multiple units.

Water trap seals are inadequate

Conventional drain traps with water seals demonstrated vulnerability to air bypass when room pressure differentials exceeded trap capacity, allowing upward airflow and potential viral particle transport.

Smoke tracers confirmed the pathway

Experimental demonstrations using smoke tracer showed clear visualization of air movement through plumbing systems, confirming pressure-driven aerosol transport through drainage infrastructure.

Vertical stacks are high-risk pathways

Vertical sanitary drainage stacks connecting multiple floors represented high-risk pathways for cross-floor viral transmission when drain traps were non-functioning or pressure differentials exceeded seal capacity.

What This Means for Your Facility

Isolation facilities are designed to contain infectious patients. But the plumbing connecting those rooms to the rest of the building can undermine that containment. When room pressure differentials push air through compromised drain traps, the isolation room's drainage system becomes a transmission pathway to other units on the same plumbing network.

Green Drain's waterless one-way valve maintains barrier integrity regardless of room pressure conditions. Unlike water seals that can be overcome by sufficient pressure differentials, the mechanical design provides consistent blockade across the full range of facility operating pressures. SGS testing confirms greater than 99.9% aerosol blockage, directly applicable to the conditions Cho et al. documented.

For hospitals planning or operating isolation units, this study establishes drain trap integrity as a fundamental infection control requirement. Drop-in installation enables rapid retrofitting of existing facilities without comprehensive plumbing redesign.

Full Citation

Cho S, Oh Y, Jung S, et al. "Virus cross-transmission potential via sanitary plumbing networks in an infectious disease isolation facility." Sustainable Cities and Society. 2024;109:105577. doi:10.1016/j.scs.2024.105577

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