The âGesundheit Machineâ Collects Campus Cooties In Race Against A Fierce Flu
Itâs turning out to be a particularly . The epidemic hasnât hit the University of Maryland College Park yet; students are just getting back from winter break. But in the close quarters of dorm rooms and cafeterias and study groups, the flu will come. And when it does,  a professor of environmental health, will be ready and waiting to learn from it.
On a blustery January day, Milton was with undergraduate research assistants Louie Gold and Amara Fox trying to get students to sign up for his  on how the flu â and other viruses â spread. They had vouchers for the school convenience store, free hot chocolate and handmade signs.
Milton was hoping dozens of students would enroll. And when any of them gets sick, they would be sent to the clinic at the School of Public Health, just across the street from the dorms.
That very day, a sick student did come by, but she didnât make the cut.
âShe had some of the right symptoms: cough, little bit of runny nose, but didnât have much of a fever,â said , who screened her for the study. In other words, theyâre looking for the people whom everyone else wants to stay away from.
Gesundheit!
If a student is sick enough, they get sent around the corner, to a room with a crazy-looking, Rube-Goldberg-like contraption known as the âGesundheit Machine.â
For half an hour, the student sits in the machine. As they breathe, the machine collects whatever virus theyâve got from the droplets .
The researchers will then use the studentsâ contacts to try to figure out how infections spread from person to person.
âRoommates, study buddies, girlfriends and boyfriends,â Milton said. âWeâre going to swab them every day for a week to see if they get infected.â
If they do get infected, researchers will try to pin down if they got the bug from the original subject, or someone else.
âWeâre going to deep-sequence the genetic code of the agent to see if it was really exactly the same thing,â Milton explained. Heâs aware confirming that your roommate gave you a horrible flu could ruin some perfectly nice roommate relationships, but itâs for science.
Louie Gold, Amara Fox and Dr. Don Milton recruit students to join the new virus study theyâre working on. (Selena Simmons-Duffin/WAMU)((Selena Simmons-Duffin/WAMU))
Recruitment efforts for the C.A.T.C.H. study are aggressive â there are signs all over campus. (Selena Simmons-Duffin/WAMU)((Selena Simmons-Duffin/WAMU))
Information For Safer Environments
The fact is, he said, we donât know that much about the mechanics of how bugs spread. Heâs trying to understand it from every possible angle.
âWeâre measuring the environment in the rooms, contact, biomarkers from blood, what theyâre shedding into the air,â he said.
All the data is not just for our information, but so we can design spaces to keep infections from spreading too easily, and protect ourselves more effectively.
Thatâs how he and his research staff can be around sick people all the time without getting infected themselves. They all got flu shots, of course, but Milton went further.
âDownstairs where the patients come in, we have upper-room UV to sanitize the air in those rooms,â he said. During his last flu study, it worked. âNot a single person on my research team got the flu that year. Even though we saw 156 people, some of whom were shedding up to 10 million copies per half-hour of the virus, none of my people got sick.â
He hopes environmental measures like these could be used to fight bugs that are even worse than the flu.
âWhat about pandemics and what about new infections that come along? How can we defend against those?â Milton asked. âIt is possible, even if itâs airborne, to protect against it. We just need to understand how it works better.â
The information they get from this study could, for example, lead to better ventilation systems that would make it harder for the flu and even more dangerous viruses to spread.
This story is part of a partnership that includes , and Kaiser Health News.