Expect this major change to your grocery stores
Preventive measures to protect CIVID-19 consumers continue to be put in place.
Grocery stores areImplementation of a number of new systemsTactics and ways of interacting designed to keep customers and staff at the security of the coronavirus pandemic. Whileplexiglass Now is almost ubiquitous at the grocer fund stands across the country, there is another new imminent change that can change the way you shop: wider grocery store aisles.
Experts in medical and public health analyzed a tonne of research and data since COVID-19 began to spread about six months ago and as a result, scientific knowledge inform new policies. What we know is thatSocial distancing and the mask are both effective tools by reducing the propagation of the virus. But if the grocery alleys are tight, it is very difficult to create the appropriate space.
In aInterview with theChicago Sun-Times, Founder Supermarketguru.comPhil LempertNoted how the days of "people liked to go to the shops and seeing their friends", is well finished, before noting the expected changes in the way customers sell grocers. Among the many grocery stores are considering that the main lines of Lemrt are this: the aisles will be made broader, so that buyers do not feel crammed.
One thing we learned about the coronavirus pandemic is that the vast majority of transmission comes from replacement events that occur insideRows collected, forced and poorly ventilated. Many grocery stores are poorly ventilated and very busy, which is why many associates have fallen sick or, tragically,succumbed to the virus. So, shopping larger aisles or better social distancing and incidents lower than transmission.
Some grocery stores are already better adapted to wider alleys than others. Anyone who has spent time in a huge suburban supermarket and a tightly packaged urban grocery knows that there will be varying degrees that some locations can apply new spatial standards. But the fact that grocery stores areactively engaged And looking for new security measures to protect customers and staff from this potentially fatal contagion is only a good thing.