Impact of ventilation on respiratory virus transmission in college
residence hall cohorts: potential for causal inference about mode of
transmission
Abstract
The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic focused attention on the importance of
ventilation to limit acute respiratory infection (ARI) transmission.
However, because few epidemiologic studies demonstrate a causal effect
of building ventilation on ARI transmission investment in solutions
remains at risk. We report results of a two-year ARI study of college
students living in campus residence halls with a trend toward 54% lower
ARI risk with higher ventilation. Our analysis suggests that the most
powerful causal analysis can be derived from focusing on roommate pairs.
Future studies should prioritize enrolling roommates rather than
individuals and confirm transmission events through whole genome
sequencing.