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Beijing: It's not just people inside Beijing's Olympic bubble who are getting tested for COVID-19.
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Workers in hazmat suits are also swabbing door handles, elevator buttons, couches and ATM machines, though health experts say surfaces pose little risk for spreading the virus.
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It's all part of the elaborate protocols to prevent the spread of the virus at the Games that also include limiting the movement of athletes and others to dedicated Olympic locations and daily testing for everyone inside that 'closed loop' of sites.
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The sight of workers testing surfaces might be surprising for many international visitors, since health experts say the virus spreads mainly through the air when infected people talk, cough or sneeze.
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Still, Deb Fuller, a virus expert at the University of Washington, says the testing could be another way to determine if the virus is getting the bubble.
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She notes studies have shown that traces of dead virus can linger in rooms where infected people have stayed.
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"They may be testing the surfaces as a marker for whether virus was in the air recently," she said.
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A medical worker collects a sample in a men's restroom.
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Two workers scan a tube after collecting swab samples from tables and chairs.
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Two medical workers head back to their office after collecting dozens of samples.
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