Forum discussion

WHO Petition needs you to sign today re best practices for healthy air guidelines

Dear Colleagues:

If you are short on time, here is the executive summary:

Time to make healthy trouble and sign a petition today to the WHO to urge them to recommend the implementation of best practice healthy air guidelines in light of the recent studies showing a direct link between the spread of COVID-19 through aerosol emissions in addition to larger droplets  – this is for INDIVIDUALS, so everyone can sign –

Here's a link to the petition for signatures:

https://www.ipetitions.com/petition/message-to-who-on-reducing-covid-airborne

If you want to be informed:

Assuming many of you read and were surprised (shocked) by the article in the NYT.

 https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/04/health/239-experts-with-one-big-claim-the-coronavirus-is-airborne.html

 

in response, we learned that the scientific community has crafted a response signed by 239 scientists – including Joe Allen from Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. You know – Cog FX fame.

 

The link-ish

 

 Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/cid/article-abstract/doi/10.1093/cid/ciaa939/5867798 by guest on 07 July 2020

 

If you can’t download it, here is a small excerpt:

 

Such measures are practical and often can be easily implemented; many are not costly. For example, simple steps such as opening both doors and windows can dramatically increase air flow rates in many buildings. For mechanical systems, organizations such as ASHRAE (the American Society of Heating, Ventilating, and Air-Conditioning Engineers) and REHVA (the Federation of European Heating, Ventilation and Air Conditioning Associations) have already provided guidelines based on the existing evidence of airborne transmission. The measures we propose offer more benefits than potential downsides, even if they can only be partially implemented.

 

It is understood that there is not as yet universal acceptance of airborne transmission of SARS-CoV2; but in our collective assessment there is more than enough supporting evidence so that the precautionary principle should apply. In order to control the pandemic, pending the availability of a vaccine, all routes of transmission must be interrupted.

In the spirit of being troublemakers, at the encouraging and leadership of Joyce Lee (past AIA COTE chair and more) a few of us have been talking about following the scientific community’s response with one of our own. I cannot think of a better group to make healthy trouble. Please sign and distribute the template language to the AEC community

The following has been a template largely developed by Mary Ann Lazarus – with huge input from Luke Leung. Luke will be making a case to the SDL group at the summit tomorrow. I will try to make the same on Thursday but you know how hard it is to following Luke – so help me out here. Sign the petition. Plus its my first time starting a post.

 

Here is the template language

I am writing to ask you to sign a statement to the World Health Organization to urge them to recommend the implementation of best practice healthy air guidelines in light of the recent studies showing a direct link between the spread of COVID-19 through aerosol emissions in addition to larger droplets. While the WHO's statement on July 9 acknowledging the potential of aerosol emissions is promising,  their brief is still limited in scope. There is a great need and opportunity for the WHO to engage built environment experts in the effort to improve indoor environments. We can make a difference in maintaining a focus on improving indoor air health given the recent media attention to this issue.  That can save lives. 

We can express our collective support with your help and your signature. 

Here's a link to the petition for signatures:

https://www.ipetitions.com/petition/message-to-who-on-reducing-covid-airborne

The goal is to complete as many signatures – targeting 1000 -  from at least 30 countries in the next week. We want to build off the momentum of the recent media attention to this issue. Also, given the upcoming return to schools and workplaces, it's very important that building and integrated system solutions be put in place. There are best practice healthy air guidelines being developed in the US and internationally that could be implemented as soon as possible. We urge the World Health Organization (WHO) to work with built environment experts and recommend the adoption of best practice air standards in the built environment to protect our global citizens.

Thanks for considering this request and please feel free to forward onto other AEI professionals around the globe. 

add your signature - here is how we have sent it out.

i KNOW many of you are already taking action

sign now. sign proud

Pauline

Joyce S. Lee FAIA, WELL AP, LEED Fellow; Mary Ann Lazarus FAIA, LEED Fellow; Kay Sargent ASID, IIDA, CID, LEED® AP, MCR.w, WELL AP; Pauline Souza, FAIA, LEED Fellow, WELL AP; Luke Leung, PE, LEED Fellow, P Eng; William P. Bahnfleth, PhD, PE, FASHRAE, FASME, FISIAQ

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Thu, 07/16/2020 - 15:50

Thx Pauline, I signed and joined 123 others who did. I appreciate the expertise and good information from this group around this topic. That said, 124 signatories is not a lot, relatively speaking. Not sure who started this or the strategy, but should I be encouraging “everyone” at my work, or the leadership to sign, or is this something more specialized? -C Chris Flint Chatto AIA, LEED AP BD+C Principal ZGF ARCHITECTS LLP T 503.863.2324 E chris.chatto@zgf.com 1223 SW Washington Street, Suite 200 Portland, OR 97205 Fro

Thu, 07/16/2020 - 15:57

Hi Chris> we're looking for individual signatures from design professionals - as many per firm as possible would be great. Especially looking for people at firms with non-US offices to sign as well. Thanks. MAL Mary Ann Lazarus maryannlazarus2@gmail.com mobile: 314.805.9332

Thu, 07/16/2020 - 17:35

Apologies for the vagueness – each signature counts Please encourage everyone to sign F

Thu, 07/16/2020 - 17:44

Pauline -can you share the several bullet points that Luke showed on his slides to the summit? Jonathan Weiss, AIA, LEED Fellow, WELL AP, Fitwel (he/him) | Director of Sustainability| Jacobs | People & Places Solutions O:+1.215.446.3360 | M:+1.215.620.7322 | jonathan.weiss@jacobs.com Working from home. Please use mobile phone or email in lieu of office phone. Stay safe.

Fri, 07/17/2020 - 03:31

yes, fair point Chris - we need more signatures - i believe 50 more today- but certainly we can use everyones help and each person's signature   Jonathan - how is the below? i am posting the pdf shared if that will also help Bullet points asked for by the SDL community (based on Lukes ppt/our discusions) – any comments or concerns?   What we want:   Urge the WHO to recommend the implementation of best practice healthy air guidelines in light of the recent studies showing a direct link between the spread of COVID-19 through aerosol emissions in addition to larger droplets. Done so by having individuals sign the petition and helping to get the word out and petition out especially to any international practitioners.  
  • The WHO July 9 brief did not make a statement in support of measures to reduce airborne exposure in the built environment – it was rather vague (stating that there may be reasonable doubt regarding the possibility of aerosol transmission)
  • Given the mutation of the virus and our growing understanding of how droplets travel, we ask that attention to aerosol transmission and the association with air mitigation measures be highlighted as important.
  • (Recent example discovery of virus found in the U of O AHU/ductwork, highlights how the virus can find its way through the mechanical system)
  therefore :
  • We support WHO’s position of the possibility of aerosol spread
  • We are not saying that aerosol transmission is confirmed to be a significant transmission route
  • We are not saying that building measures can eliminate transmission
  • However, if we apply the “do no harm” principle and state the important understanding that air mitigation measures can help to protect lives,  and we believe it will bring better attention to healthy air guidelines being developed in the U.S. and internationally.
  • This is especially important given the upcoming return to schools and workplace
  • We are saying that we can make a difference in maintaining a focus on improving indoor air health given the recent media attention to this issue. We can express our collective support with your help and your signature. 
  Here's a link to the petition for signatures: https://www.ipetitions.com/petition/message-to-who-on-reducing-covid-airborne

Fri, 07/17/2020 - 21:37

Update: The party is going on Signed: Ed Mazria, Rachel Gutter, Rick Fedrizzi, Julie Hiromoto and you! – its going to be a blast Sign on now. We are at 320 signatures. 15 countries. We need more. Please reach out to any international colleagues so we can show global representation! Much obliged Bullet points What we want: Urge the WHO to recommend the implementation of best practice healthy air guidelines in light of the recent studies showing a direct link between the spread of COVID-19 through aerosol emissions in addition to larger droplets. Done so by having individuals sign the petition and helping to get the word out and petition out especially to any international practitioners. * The WHO July 9 brief did not make a statement in support of adopting indoor air contaminant control best practices. The scientific brief on July 9th, did list “Airborne Transmission” under “Modes of Transmission” and commented, “WHO, together with the scientific community, has been actively discussing and evaluating whether SARS-CoV-2 may also spread through aerosols in the absence of aerosol generating procedures, particularly in indoor settings with poor ventilation.” * Given the mutation of the virus and our growing understanding of how droplets travel, we ask that attention to aerosol transmission and the association with air mitigation measures be highlighted as important. * (Recent example discovery of virus found in the AHUs of a health care facility, by University of Oregon, highlights how the virus can find its way through the HVAC system) therefore : * We support WHO’s position of the virus SARS-coV2 airborne transmission should be listed as a possibility of modes of transmission * We are not saying that aerosol transmission is confirmed to be a significant transmission path * We are not saying that building air control best practices can eliminate transmission * However, if we apply the “do no harm” principle and state the important understanding that air mitigation measures can help to protect lives, and we believe it will bring better attention to healthy air guidelines being developed in the U.S. and internationally. * This is especially important given the upcoming return to schools and workplace * We are saying that we can make a difference in maintaining a focus on improving indoor air health given the recent media attention to this issue. We can express our collective support with your help and your signature. Here's a link to the petition for signatures: https://www.ipetitions.com/petition/message-to-who-on-reducing-covid-airborne From: Pauline Souza

Tue, 07/21/2020 - 10:55

Pauline, Can I put this in my newsletter? It goes out Thursday Sent from my iPhone

Wed, 07/22/2020 - 05:58

Yes absolutely!

Wed, 07/22/2020 - 13:38

is there a LinkedIn post that we can share? 

Sat, 08/01/2020 - 18:45

Great green peeps – we are at 675! Thank you. If you haven’t signed and was looking for a good weekend thing to do – please do sign. Now is the moment Here's a link to the petition for signatures: https://www.ipetitions.com/petition/message-to-who-on-reducing-covid-airborne From:

Wed, 08/05/2020 - 17:33

THANK YOU TO THIS  BRAVE INSPRING DIVERSE VILLAGE OF SUSTAINABLE LEADERS (aka positive troublemakers) - we have issued the petition to the WHO and have attached the release and potential posts for you below.   wanted to pass along appreciation below  - beautifully penned by Mary Ann!   Thank you again for joining our petition urging the World Health Organization (WHO) to adopt and advance indoor environment best practices proven to help protect building occupants worldwide from the spread of COVID-19.  The petition has been delivered, and we’ve put out the attached news release.    We encourage you to send the release to your friends, colleagues and media contacts, and also to use your social media presence to amplify our call to action.  Some sample posts are below.   WHO Petition  Sample social media posts   Together with more than 680 built environment experts from across the globe, we urge public health leaders to adopt and advance indoor environment best practices to help protect people worldwide from the spread of #COVID19. Read our full statement here.   Our buildings are a critical part of our defense to today’s public health crisis. In joining my colleagues from across the globe in a petition to @WHO, I’m hopeful we can advance science-based solutions and help save the lives of many. More info here.   I'm proud to join more than 680 built environment experts from 51 countries to advance the universal belief that our buildings play a crucial role in the fight against #COVID19. Learn more about our call to action here.     Thank you for your leadership and engagement on this important issue.   Mary Ann on behalf of the core organizing team: Joyce S. Lee FAIA, WELL AP, LEED Fellow; Mary Ann Lazarus FAIA, LEED Fellow; Kay Sargent ASID, IIDA, CID, LEED® AP, MCR.w, WELL AP; Pauline Souza, FAIA, LEED Fellow, WELL AP; Luke Leung, PE, LEED Fellow, P Eng; William P. Bahnfleth, PhD, PE, FASHRAE, FASME, FISIAQ 

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