Most COVID patients did this before getting sick, according to the CDC
Above all, avoid this if you do not want coronaviruses.
Disease and Prevention Control Centers (CDC) stated that there is one thing most people diagnosed withCOVID-19 [Feminine Have you before massing: they were in close contact with an infected person.According toOFFICIAL DECLARATION OF CDC, "The virus that causes most COVID-19 deviations spread between people who are in close contact between them (about 6 feet, or 2 lengths of arms)," said the agency. "It spreads through the respiratory droplets or small particles, such as those of aerosols, produced when an infected person touches, sneezes, sings, speaks or breathes." Read to see why it puts you in danger and how to avoid it - and to ensure your health and health of others, do not miss theseWithout signs that you have already had coronavirus.
Avoid "Closed Spaces" with "Inadequate Ventilation"
These droplets usually fall on the six feet floor, where they no longer pose a danger of transmission. This is where the directive on six feet social distancing comes. However, the notes of CDC, small particles can linger in the air and cause infection - which is called suspended transmission in the air.
"It is proven that under certain conditions, people with COVID-19 appear to have infected other persons over 6 meters," says the agency."These transmissions took place in closed spaces that had inadequate ventilation. Sometimes the infected person breathed herself strongly, for example while singing or doing exercise."
Nevertheless, the agency notes that narrow contact is a much more common mode of transmission: "The available data indicate that it is much more common than the virus causes the propagation of COVID-19 to spread through close contact with a person who has COVID-19 than through airborne transmission. "
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What is "close contact", exactly?
At this point, it is virtually evangelical that you should maintain a safe social distance six feet of people who are not in your household. But last fall, the CDC extended to this directive.
Before last October, the CDC defined a "close contact" as a person who has spent at least 15 minutes consecutive at six feet from someone with COVID-19. The new orientation of the Agency has changed this definition to a person within six feet of an infected person for 15 cumulative minutes or more over a period of 24 hours, starting two days before the appearance of their illness or A positive result.
The change was inspired by a report published in the journalMmwrA 20-year-old Vermont prison employee who contracted coronavirus after a brief interaction over a quarter of eight hours with six people who tested for Covid-19 the next day.
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How to survive this pandemic
As for yourself, do everything you can to prevent you from installing and spread-Covid-19 in the first place:Carry a face maskBe tested if you think you have coronavirus, avoid crowds (and bars and evenings of the house), practice social distance, do only run essential races, wash your hands regularly, disinfect frequently affected areas and to cross this healthiest pandemic, do not miss these35 places you are most likely to catch Covid.