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Comparing strategies for the mitigation of SARS-CoV-2 airborne infection risk in tiered auditorium venues
Comparing strategies for the mitigation of SARS-CoV-2 airborne infection risk in tiered auditorium venues

study on COVID-19 in auditoriums found displacement ventilation minimized infection risk, while natural ventilation had highest spread.

Masks, shorter events, and lower occupancy helped reduce risks.

·nature.com·
Comparing strategies for the mitigation of SARS-CoV-2 airborne infection risk in tiered auditorium venues
Pleasure to share a session on Clean Indoor Air at Healthy Work Conference with and and hearing about their work to improve education and inclusiveness in this space.
Pleasure to share a session on Clean Indoor Air at Healthy Work Conference with and and hearing about their work to improve education and inclusiveness in this space.
“Pleasure to share a session on Clean Indoor Air at @unionsaustralia Healthy Work Conference with @plumskyjam and @ColinKinner and hearing about their work to improve education and inclusiveness in this space.”
·x.com·
Pleasure to share a session on Clean Indoor Air at Healthy Work Conference with and and hearing about their work to improve education and inclusiveness in this space.
Opinion: What you should know about COVID this fall
Opinion: What you should know about COVID this fall

“How is COVID-19 spread? When people cough, sneeze or talk, viral particles can be sent through the air and via droplets. Masking helps to prevent droplet spread, and keeping more than two metres apart and staying in a well-ventilated area can help to limit aerosol spread.

While not a predominant cause of transmission, COVID-19 can also be spread through objects contaminated with secretions from an infected person. The incubation period for COVID-19 — the time from exposure to developing an infection — is about two to four days with the current variant.”

·montrealgazette.com·
Opinion: What you should know about COVID this fall
What would an adequate COVID response look like?
What would an adequate COVID response look like?
“Refusal to directly communicate 1) how COVID spreads 2) that it can be avoided 3) how it can be avoided while modeling mitigation, makes pandemic communications much more difficult for vulnerable people, activists and marginalized groups attempting to reduce disease burden in their communities. We should not be swimming against the current of public health officials’ poor pandemic hygiene.”
Refusal to directly communicate 1) how COVID spreads 2) that it can be avoided 3) how it can be avoided while modeling mitigation, makes pandemic communications much more difficult for vulnerable people, activists and marginalized groups attempting to reduce disease burden in their communities. We should not be swimming against the current of public health officials’ poor pandemic hygiene.
·thegauntlet.news·
What would an adequate COVID response look like?
Protecting HCWs and patients: An impossible fix, or an essential one?
Protecting HCWs and patients: An impossible fix, or an essential one?
“We have dedicated our lives to saving lives. And yet we are trapped in a system where infecting each other and our patients has apparently become acceptable. With no end to COVID waves on the horizon (we’re in a substantial one right now), what is the endgame our health-care leaders are hoping for?”
·calgaryherald.com·
Protecting HCWs and patients: An impossible fix, or an essential one?
Health and air travel: Why I still wear a mask on planes
Health and air travel: Why I still wear a mask on planes

“I’m sick of getting sick on planes. I got another case of COVID-19 last month, on a domestic flight, sitting near a woman who was sneezing. I wore an N95 mask, but she was only wearing the loose surgical type. I suspect she knew she was infectious.”

I’m sick of getting sick on planes. I got another case of COVID-19 last month, on a domestic flight, sitting near a woman who was sneezing. I wore an N95 mask, but she was only wearing the loose surgical type. I suspect she knew she was infectious.
·archive.is·
Health and air travel: Why I still wear a mask on planes