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'You should fly': Southwest Airlines CEO said traveling by plane is safe, despite the CDC and infectious disease experts warning against air travel

Allana Akhtar   

'You should fly': Southwest Airlines CEO said traveling by plane is safe, despite the CDC and infectious disease experts warning against air travel
  • Southwest Airlines CEO Gary Kelly said said passengers "should fly" during the coronavirus pandemic in a recent interview with Axios.
  • Kelly said air cabins recirculate and filter air well, but public health experts say patrons can still contract the virus in crowded airports and sitting near sick passengers.
  • About $4 the weekend before Thanksgiving, going against the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's $4.
  • "You just don't quite know who's on that plane, where they've been, and what their state is," Thomas Russo, chief of the division of infectious disease at the University at Buffalo, previously told $4.

Southwest Airlines CEO Gary Kelly said said passengers "should" fly during the coronavirus pandemic.

"You should fly," Kelly said in an interview with $4. "We all need to be responsible, and we all need to be smart about what kind of personal interactions we have."

Kelly said the problem with getting coronavirus is "not being on the airplane," but rather what travelers do outside the air cabin.

About $4 the weekend before Thanksgiving, defying the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention $4. The US has hit more than 12 million total COVID-19 cases, and a record 85,700 patients were $4.

Read more: $4

Recent research finds that the virus can $4 in spaces with poorly ventilated air. The outdoors or spaces that move outdoor air inside have $4 and prisons. Kelly said airplanes recirculate air every few minutes and filter it through a "hospital-grade" filtration system.

But public health experts and scientists say there is still a big risk in air travel. One report in the journal Emerging Infectious Disease traced 16 coronavirus cases back to a single 10-hour flight, where 92% of passengers sitting near an infected passenger got sick.

Passengers do not simply drive up to the airplane before taking off — they must stand in TSA lines and airport crowds with strangers who may be carrying the virus. Travelers can minimize risk by physically distancing themselves from others, but $4 $4 show airports are crowded with holiday travelers.

Read more: $4

Blocking the middle seat helps create space between passengers, but Southwest Airlines will $4. The airline posted a $4 in the third quarter due to fewer people traveling during the pandemic, and announced the first layoff in its 53-year history $4.

If patrons wear masks at all times during the flight, Kelly said travelers can further protect themselves. Masks, though highly effective, are not foolproof, which is why public health guidance has been to combine mask wearing with staying six feet apart from others. Airplanes seats are close together, which makes physical distancing difficult for travelers.

"You just don't quite know who's on that plane, where they've been, and what their state is," Thomas Russo, chief of the division of infectious disease at the University at Buffalo, told $4. "The mask affords a certain degree of protection, but there's no question there's going to be some risk with this situation, particularly the longer the flight is and the more crowded it is."

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