(Press-News.org) Picture a hospital and you might imagine concrete, stainless steel or plastic. But University of Oregon researchers hope to make wood — often overlooked in health care facilities — more commonplace in those settings.
Exposed wood, they’ve found, can resist microbial growth after it briefly gets wet. During their study, wood samples tested lower for levels of bacterial abundance than an empty plastic enclosure used as a control.
“People generally think of wood as unhygienic in a medical setting,” said assistant professor Mark Fretz, co-director of the UO’s Institute for Health in the Built Environment and principal investigator for the study. “But wood actually transfers microbes at a lower rate than other less porous materials such as stainless steel.”
Numerous studies support these properties of wood. A UO-led research team including scientists from the Salk Institute for Biological Studies and Portland State University wanted to explore what happens when wood gets wet then dries.
In a recent study published in Frontiers in Microbiomes, they shared their discoveries about the effects of moisture on surface microbes and volatile organic compound emissions from mass timber.
Mass timber is an engineered wood material emerging as a popular construction alternative in the U.S. But exposed wood is rarely used in health care facilities. That’s due in part to strict building codes that are slow to evolve, Fretz said. Another reason: widespread misperceptions about wood and pathogens.
“We wanted to explore how mass timber would stand up to the everyday rigors of health care settings,” said Gwynne Mhuireach, a UO research assistant professor. “In hospitals and clinics, germs are always present and surfaces occasionally get wet.”
For the experiment, blocks of cross-laminated timber were sealed in disinfected plastic boxes to create a micro-environment with carefully controlled temperature and humidity. To simulate a healthcare setting, air was filtered and exchanged at rates similar to hospital codes.
The team sprayed the blocks with tap water, inoculated them with a cocktail of microbes commonly found in hospitals, and took samples over a four-month period. An empty plastic box was used as a control.
The researchers compared coated and uncoated wood samples under three types of water spray events: just once, every day for a week and daily over four weeks.
The results of the study indicated wood is effective at inhibiting bacteria and revealed clues about wetting that will inform future research and development, Mhuireach said.
The empty plastic control box had greater viable microbial abundance than the wood samples, excluding the first 14 days after inoculation.
Wetting the wood blocks reduced the abundance of viable bacterial cells, with no discernable difference between coated and uncoated specimens. During wetting, microbial composition reflected what’s common in tap water more than the hospital pathogens the team introduced.
The experiments were the first to explore relationships between microbial communities on cross-laminated timber surfaces and the emission of volatile organic compounds, or VOCs, under dry and wetted conditions, Mhuireach said.
VOCs are chemicals that spread quickly in the air and are responsible for odors as diverse as perfume, mold or “new car smell.” Some present health hazards, but others are beneficial.
Wood can emit compounds called terpenes. Many smell pleasant and inhibit microbial growth. Mhuireach added there was a plateau in VOC emissions after wetting, which the team interpreted as a slight increase compared to an overall downward trend.
The study marks another milestone for the UO’s work to promote the use of mass timber in health care facilities.
That effort began in 2020 with funding from a Wood Innovations grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Fretz said. That led to the formation of a focus group including architects, engineers and experts in health care building codes. Funding from the grant helped support this project.
Through his work with the TallWood Design Institute, a collaboration of the UO and Oregon State University, Fretz has been working to promote the production and use of mass timber, including materials manufactured in Oregon.
Construction using engineered wood produced from cross-laminated layers of veneer or lumber started in Europe during the mid-1990s and is growing in the U.S.
Stronger per pound than steel or concrete, mass timber boasts a smaller carbon footprint. Exposed wood also promotes health and healing, Fretz said, because it appeals to our inherent tendencies to connect with nature.
The benefits of that human trait, what architects and designers call biophilia, go beyond mere aesthetics.
Numerous studies link biophilic design to better health care outcomes, including shorter hospital stays, faster healing and mental wellness.
Wood’s ability to inhibit the spread of pathogens may stem from pores that trap bacteria or antimicrobial chemical compounds that occur naturally, Fretz said. It could also result from wood’s capacity to absorb moisture.
A respiratory virus shed indoors travels in a droplet of water. Wood will dry out that droplet faster than plastic or stainless steel, reducing virus survival time.
END
Mass timber could elevate hospital construction
Research on how wood materials handle bacteria show the material's potential in health care facilities
2025-07-07
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
A nuanced model of soil moisture illuminates plant behavior and climate patterns
2025-07-07
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) — Any home gardener knows they have to tailor their watering regime for different plants. Forgetting to water their flowerbed over the weekend could spell disaster, but the trees will likely be fine. Plants have evolved different strategies to manage their water use, but soil moisture models have mostly neglected this until now.
Researchers at UC Santa Barbara and San Diego State University sought a way to move beyond simple on/off models to capture the nuanced ways that plants manage water stress. To ...
$2.6 million NIH grant backs search for genetic cure in deadly heart disease
2025-07-07
Fourteen million people worldwide suffer from enlarged hearts, or hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), a genetic disease that thickens the heart’s walls, making it harder for the organ to pump blood — but many of them don’t know it.
The disease is often undiagnosed, despite being the most common genetic heart disease and having contributed to the sudden deaths of numerous high-profile athletes, including players in the NFL, NBA and NHL.
Now, Sherry Gao, Presidential Penn Compact Associate Professor in Chemical ...
Pennsylvania’s medical cannabis program changed drastically when anxiety was added as a qualifying condition
2025-07-07
PITTSBURGH, July 7, 2025 — Within months of Pennsylvania’s medical cannabis program adding anxiety as a qualifying condition, that diagnosis quickly rose to become the most common for cannabis certifications, according to a study by researchers at the University of Pittsburgh and Johns Hopkins University. The study was published today in Annals of Internal Medicine.
To date, 39 states have medical cannabis programs, with chronic pain and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) historically being the most ...
1 in 5 overweight adults could be reclassified with obesity according to new framework
2025-07-07
Embargoed for release until 5:00 p.m. ET on Monday 7 July 2025
Follow @Annalsofim on X, Facebook, Instagram, threads, and Linkedin
Below please find summaries of new articles that will be published in the next issue of Annals of Internal Medicine. The summaries are not intended to substitute for the full articles as a source of information. This information is under strict embargo and by taking it into possession, media representatives are committing to the terms ...
Findings of study on how illegally manufactured fentanyl enters U.S. contradict common assumptions, undermining efforts to control supply
2025-07-07
Illegally manufactured fentanyl kills a significant number of people in the United States and Canada every year. Since the emergence of modern heroin markets in the late 1960s, controlling supply has been associated with important reductions in opioid use and harms in several cases worldwide. But these efforts depend on understanding the dominant drug-trafficking routes.
In a new analysis, researchers developed an index to compare U.S. counties’ proportion of large seizures against their proportion of the national population. Their findings counter ...
Satellite observations provide insight into post-wildfire forest recovery
2025-07-07
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: JULY 7, 2025
Contacts:
Audrey Merket, NSF NCAR and UCAR Science Writer and Public Information Officer
amerket@ucar.edu
303-497-8293
David Hosansky, NSF NCAR and UCAR Manager of Media Relations
hosansky@ucar.edu
720-470-2073
Using satellite observations to evaluate forest recovery following a wildfire could be an innovative, cost-efficient way to assess the effectiveness of land management practices, according to research published earlier this year.
Scientists at the U.S. National Science Foundation National Center for Atmospheric Research ...
Three years in, research shows regional, personal differences in use of 988 lifeline
2025-07-07
Who is most likely to use the 988, the national suicide and crisis lifeline launched on July 16, 2022?
Two studies led by researchers at the NYU School of Global Public Health find both geographic differences and personal factors that shape where people might seek help during mental health crises. For instance, people in western and northeastern states are more likely to have called 988 than those in the South; similarly, Democrats are more inclined to say that they would use 988 than Republicans. In addition, more than 10 percent of calls came from veterans.
The findings, published in JAMA Network ...
Beyond the alpha male
2025-07-07
To the point
Power relationships between males and females are less clear-cut than expected: In most species, neither sex clearly dominates over the other.
Evolutionary factors shape intersexual power: Males have power when they can physically outcompete females, while females rely on different pathways to achieve power over males.
New findings by researchers at the University of Montpellier, the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, and the German Primate Center in Göttingen resolve why male-female power ...
For fish, hovering is not restful
2025-07-07
Fish make hanging motionless in the water column look effortless, and scientists had long assumed that this meant it was a type of rest. Now, a new study reveals that fish use nearly twice as much energy when hovering in place compared to resting.
The study, led by scientists at the University of California San Diego’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography, also details the biomechanics of fish hovering, which includes constant, subtle fin movements to prevent tipping, drifting or rolling. This more robust understanding of how fish actively maintain their position could inform the design of underwater robots ...
Smithsonian-led team discovers North America’s oldest known pterosaur
2025-07-07
A Smithsonian-led team of researchers have discovered North America’s oldest known pterosaur, the winged reptiles that lived alongside dinosaurs and were the first vertebrates to evolve powered flight. In a paper published today, July 7, in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers led by paleontologist Ben Kligman, a Peter Buck Postdoctoral Fellow at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History, present the fossilized jawbone of the new species and describe the sea gull-sized ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
When domesticated rabbits go feral, new morphologies emerge
Rain events could cause major failure of Waikīkī storm drainage by 2050
Breakthrough in upconversion luminescence research: Uncovering the energy back transfer mechanism
Hidden role of 'cell protector' opens cancer treatment possibilities
How plants build the microbiome they need to survive in a tough environment
Depression due to politics and its quiet danger to democracy addressed in new book 'The Sad Citizen'
International experts and patients unite to help ensure all patients are fully informed before consenting to new surgical procedures
Melting glaciers could trigger more explosive eruptions globally, finds research
Nearly half of U.S. grandchildren live within 10 miles of a grandparent
Study demonstrates low-cost method to remove CO₂ from air using cold temperatures, common materials
Masonic Medical Research Institute (MMRI) welcomes 13 students to prestigious Summer Fellowship program
Mass timber could elevate hospital construction
A nuanced model of soil moisture illuminates plant behavior and climate patterns
$2.6 million NIH grant backs search for genetic cure in deadly heart disease
Pennsylvania’s medical cannabis program changed drastically when anxiety was added as a qualifying condition
1 in 5 overweight adults could be reclassified with obesity according to new framework
Findings of study on how illegally manufactured fentanyl enters U.S. contradict common assumptions, undermining efforts to control supply
Satellite observations provide insight into post-wildfire forest recovery
Three years in, research shows regional, personal differences in use of 988 lifeline
Beyond the alpha male
For fish, hovering is not restful
Smithsonian-led team discovers North America’s oldest known pterosaur
A study shakes up received ideas on male domination among primates
LMD strengthens global ties in Italy: Deepening cooperation with Embassy, CNR, and University of Rome Tor Vergata
University of Cincinnati study explores fertility treatment risks for kidney transplant recipients
Study uncovers how harmful RNA clumps form — and a way to dissolve them
A new perspective on designing urban low-altitude logistics networks subhead: Balancing cost, safety, and noise through co-evolutionary multi-objective optimization
Mobile mindfulness meditation apps may improve attention
Positive emotions may strengthen memories
Polycystic ovary syndrome patients say they feel dismissed and misunderstood, according to new study
[Press-News.org] Mass timber could elevate hospital constructionResearch on how wood materials handle bacteria show the material's potential in health care facilities