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LIVESCIENCE by Rachel Rettner May 6, 2015
The Ebola virus can live on surfaces in hospitals for nearly two weeks, a new study suggests.
Researchers tested how long the Ebola virus could survive on plastic, stainless steel and Tyvek, a material used in Ebola suits. The researchers also simulated different environmental conditions, including a climate-controlled hospital at 70 degrees Fahrenheit (21 degrees Celsius) and 40 percent humidity, and the typical environment of West Africa, at 80 F (27 C) and 80 percent humidity.
In general, the virus survived on surfaces for a longer time when in the climate-controlled conditions than in the West African environment, the study found. Under hospital-like conditions, the virus lived for 11 days on Tyvek, eight days on plastic and four days on stainless steel. The longest the virus was able to survive in the tropical conditions of the West African environment was three days, on Tyvek.
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http://www.livescience.com/50758-ebola-virus-survival-surfaces.html
Ebola Virus Stability on Surfaces and in Fluids in Simulated Outbreak Environments
CDC IED JOURNAL Volume 21, Number 7—July 2015
Abstract
We evaluated the stability of Ebola virus on surfaces and in fluids under simulated environmental conditions for the climate of West Africa and for climate-controlled hospitals. This virus remains viable for a longer duration on surfaces in hospital conditions than in African conditions and in liquid than in dried blood.
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http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/21/7/15-0253_article
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