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What are you doing to keep covid out of your home
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<blockquote data-quote="JohnEGreen" data-source="post: 2258258" data-attributes="member: 223921"><p>[USER=216415]@Mr_Pot[/USER] But then there are house flies that tend to come from maybe someone's house into yours alighting on surfaces throughout the house then flying off to some other house maybe.</p><p></p><p>"There have been no reports of COVID-19 transmission by blood-sucking arthropods such as mosquitoes (9-13). However, insects such as cockroaches and houseflies, which are major mechanical vectors of pathogens, may be able to transmit the disease by contact with contaminated surfaces and even with the feces of infected individuals (14-16). The present study aimed to investigate the possibility of COVID-19 transmission by houseflies and cockroaches."</p><p></p><p><a href="http://archcid.com/articles/102863.html" target="_blank">http://archcid.com/articles/102863.html</a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="JohnEGreen, post: 2258258, member: 223921"] [USER=216415]@Mr_Pot[/USER] But then there are house flies that tend to come from maybe someone's house into yours alighting on surfaces throughout the house then flying off to some other house maybe. "There have been no reports of COVID-19 transmission by blood-sucking arthropods such as mosquitoes (9-13). However, insects such as cockroaches and houseflies, which are major mechanical vectors of pathogens, may be able to transmit the disease by contact with contaminated surfaces and even with the feces of infected individuals (14-16). The present study aimed to investigate the possibility of COVID-19 transmission by houseflies and cockroaches." [URL]http://archcid.com/articles/102863.html[/URL] [/QUOTE]
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