Can the COVID-19 virus live on or in food?

lenny

girls just wanna have fu
May 20, 2004
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your GF's panties
Can the COVID-19 virus live on or in food?

If affirmative, what might happen when this infected food touches a person's mouth or goes down their throat, intestines, stomach etc? Might that lead to an infection?

BTW, as regards the mouth, it has been stated people should not touch their mouth with their unwashed hands in case the virus is living on the surface of their hands.

Would freezing or cooking any food or drinks before ingesting them kill the virus? At what temperature & or for how long?

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"Spreading coronavirus: ‘There have been no reports of transmission through food’12-Mar-2020 By Flora Southey
EFSA says there is no evidence that food is a likely source of transmission of coronavirus disease (COVID-19).

https://www.foodnavigator.com/Artic...-been-no-reports-of-transmission-through-food

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"Can I catch the coronavirus by eating food handled or prepared by others?

We are still learning about transmission of the new coronavirus. It's not clear if it can be spread by an infected person through food they have handled or prepared, but if so it would more likely be the exception than the rule.

That said, the new coronavirus is a respiratory virus known to spread by upper respiratory secretions, including airborne droplets after coughing or sneezing. The virus that causes COVID-19 has also been detected in the stool of certain people. So we currently cannot rule out the possibility of the infection being transmitted through food by an infected person who has not thoroughly washed their hands. In the case of hot food, the virus would likely be killed by cooking. This may not be the case with uncooked foods like salads or sandwiches."

https://www.health.harvard.edu/diseases-and-conditions/coronavirus-resource-center
 

treveller

Member
Sep 22, 2008
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Cooking would certainly kill the bug.

If it has time on the mucus membranes of your eyes, nose or mouth it could attach and grow but if the bug is on food you are eating it would most likely be dead in your stomach before it has any opportunity to cause infection. This is not a hardy virus and stomach acid kills most things.
 

lenny

girls just wanna have fu
May 20, 2004
4,098
76
48
your GF's panties
Cooking would certainly kill the bug.

If it has time on the mucus membranes of your eyes, nose or mouth it could attach and grow but if the bug is on food you are eating it would most likely be dead in your stomach before it has any opportunity to cause infection. This is not a hardy virus and stomach acid kills most things.
Exactly where are these "mucus membranes" & how long does food interact with them in the mouth?
 

treveller

Member
Sep 22, 2008
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Fun Fact. In an adult human the total surface area of the mucosa is about 400 square meters while the surface area of the skin is about 2 square meters.
The source is
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mucous_membrane

I expect chewing and swallowing would move most virus into the stomach before it had time to attach and enter a cell in the mucosa. Just a guess of course. When a virus lands in the mucuosa of the upper airway it would sit there for a relatively long time and be more likely to infect. Virus can't replicate on their own like bacteria. They infect a cell and the cell makes replicas. This means a virus cannot "live" or replicate on or in food. To replicate or infect it needs to be on or in living tissue. A virus may be able to survive or remain viable on or in food and you might call this "living" but it cannot multiply there like bacteria.
 

Mikehma

Sir DATY the Vulvinator
Aug 19, 2014
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Anecdotally, there was one person who tested +ve in a McDonalds in Calgary. They closed the restaurant.
 
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