Abstract

Airlines have introduced a back-to-front boarding process in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. It is motivated by the desire to reduce passengers' likelihood of passing close to seated passengers when they take their seats. However, our prior work on the risk of Ebola spread in aeroplanes suggested that the driving force for increased exposure to infection transmission risk is the clustering of passengers while waiting for others to stow their luggage and take their seats. In this work, we examine whether the new boarding processes lead to increased or decreased risk of infection spread. We also study the reasons behind the risk differences associated with different boarding processes. We accomplish this by simulating the new boarding processes using pedestrian dynamics and compare them against alternatives. Our results show that back-to-front boarding roughly doubles the infection exposure compared with random boarding. It also increases exposure by around 50% compared to a typical boarding process prior to the outbreak of COVID-19. While keeping middle seats empty yields a substantial reduction in exposure, our results show that the different boarding processes have similar relative strengths in this case as with middle seats occupied. We show that the increased exposure arises from the proximity between passengers moving in the aisle and while seated. Such exposure can be reduced significantly by prohibiting the use of overhead bins to stow luggage. Our results suggest that the new boarding procedures increase the risk of exposure to COVID-19 compared with prior ones and are substantially worse than a random boarding process.

Highlights

  • Outbreaks of several serious diseases, such as SARS, influenza, measles and tuberculosis, have occurred during air travel [1,2,3,4,5]

  • Our results suggest that airlines would have a lower infection risk from their pre-COVID-19 boarding process

  • Given that the new boarding procedures are meant to reduce exposure to the virus during boarding, we focus on the merits of these changes alone in this paper

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Summary

Introduction

Outbreaks of several serious diseases, such as SARS, influenza, measles and tuberculosis, have occurred during air travel [1,2,3,4,5]. The trend towards back-to-front boarding by rows is motivated by the desire to reduce the likelihood of passengers passing others when they take their seats [7]. Such a boarding process is known to be slower than alternative processes [9], a reduction in social proximity would lead to a reduced risk of exposure to viruses, and reduced risk of an infection outbreak inflight

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