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Can You Catch Coronavirus From A Swimming Pool?

a large hotel with many people swimming in a pool

Summer vacations are about to go into full swing. AAA is estimating that Americans will take 700 million trips this summer. That’s about 15% less compared to the summer of 2019, but it’s still a whole lot of people traveling.

Lots of people traveling means lots of people using hotel swimming pools and other bodies of water. So the big question is, can you catch COVID-19 from a swimming pool? How about from lakes? Rivers? The ocean? And what are the risks?

The 2019 Novel Coronavirus is still new to humankind and scientists are learning more about it every day. However, as far as experts can tell, water in a swimming pool won’t give you coronavirus, as long as it’s well maintained, chemically. Standard disinfection with chlorine or bromine will kill the virus in water. The CDC says, similarly, that “proper operation and disinfection of pools, hot tubs, and water playgrounds should kill the virus that causes COVID-19.”.

Of course, if you’re on vacation, you might not be swimming in a pool. Well, if you’re swimming in the ocean, the saltwater will make it difficult for any virus to survive. And even if you’re in freshwater, such as a lake or river, the water, just as it would in any large body of water, would dilute any virus in secretions, which would make it difficult to infect you.

So then you can swim wherever you want and not risk getting sick?

Nope.

You probably won’t catch COVID-19 simply by being in a body of water. Either the chemicals or salt in the water will kill the virus, or the vast amount of water would dilute any virus that got in, so it wouldn’t be enough to infect you. But that’s not how the virus is usually transmitted.

Coronavirus is spread either from touching a surface with the virus on it and then touching your eyes, nose or mouth. Or you can get it by being near someone who has the virus (whether they know it or not – even people who don’t have symptoms are contagious) and who coughs or sneezes near you, or breathes, talks, sings, screams near you.

So it’s not so much the body of water itself as who else is in the water with you, if they have the virus (and again, you can have it and not know it!), and how close they are to you for how long. That’s why social distancing is recommended, even in the water.

Other recommendations to keep yourself safe while at the pool/lake/ocean/etc.:

#stayhealthy #staysafe #washyourhands

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This post first appeared on Your Mileage May Vary

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