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Assessing the survival of SARS-CoV-2 on food surfaces and food packaging materials

Objective

This project has been commissioned to measure the rate of inactivation of virus on the surface of various types of food, reducing that uncertainty. The results will be used to consider whether the assumption currently made in our risk assessment remains appropriate for food kept at a range of temperatures, or whether a lower risk is more appropriate for some. Scientists will conduct a laboratory-based study to artificially inoculate infectious SARS-CoV-2 virus onto the surfaces of these materials and then measure how the amount of infectious virus present on those surfaces declines over time. The food and packaging types to be studied include: fresh vegetables, fresh fruit, baked produce, delicatessen items, polyethylene terephthalate (PET) plastic bottles (500ml)
PET material such as ready meal containers, aluminium cans (330ml), composite material drinks cartons with a rip/pull feature. They will be studied at a range of temperatures and humidity levels and over time periods that reflect their typical storage conditions. The contractor will begin by comparing several methods for the recovery of virus from these materials to ensure that the best available method is used for the other experiments.

Institution
University of Southampton
Start date
2021
End date
2021
Project number
FS430621