Ebola is not an airborne respiratory virus in the way influenza, measles, or COVID-19 are. It does not spread through routine breathing, talking, or being in the same room as a healthy-looking person. It spreads through direct contact with the blood or body fluids of a symptomatic person, or with contaminated surfaces. This is the single most common misconception about Ebola.
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Start Free AI Analysis →Could Ebola become airborne in the future?
Researchers monitor virus evolution, but there is no evidence that Ebola has become airborne, and the structural biology of the virus makes such a change unlikely. Public-health planning is based on the contact-transmission model.
Why do healthcare workers wear full protective suits then?
Protective suits guard against splashes, sprays, and accidental contact with body fluids during patient care — not because the virus drifts through the air. The level of protection reflects how easily contact transmission can occur in a clinical setting.
What about coughing or sneezing — could that spread Ebola?
A direct spray of respiratory droplets or fluids onto someone's mucous membranes could theoretically transmit the virus, but this is a form of direct contact — not airborne spread across a room. Ordinary breathing or talking does not transmit Ebola.
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