What are the high risk methods for indoors? #EnviroHealthMatters Remember masks are needed indoors.
@Don_Milton used the 3C's and says masks + distance helps. @CathNoakes mentions time and says we need masks + focus on winter, believing going inside is a risk. #EnviroHealthMatters
Kanta Subbarao says the viral load, determining who is the superspreader, envirometal, and ventilation. She wants to find out who sheads more. #EnviroHealthMatters
We all agree no one thing will do, but @Prof_Lowe thinks these will stop other respiratory diesases, and might smart to making rooms ventilated. Emmie Witt emphasizes #TestTraceIsolate#EnviroHealthMatters
Collaboration in science is needed. They view Jay Butler and Linsey Marr as terminology. That is not what I heard. I heard CDC assuming ballistic transmission is what matters. #EnviroHealthMatters
This submission is an explicit condemnation of the Great Barrington Declaration. @gbdeclaration and praises opponents, including @gorskon and @GidMK (2/
It calls out corporate influence and disinformation filed before the Supreme Court, including citations of @DrJBhattacharya by @OhioAG office. (3/
@CDCgov@fema If you are a close contact to someone who tests positive, CDC guidance is to quarantine for five days and then get tested. (1/
@CDCgov@fema The CDC guidance says if up to date on vaccinations, in lieu of quarantine: (1) wear a well fitting mask around others (2) avoid being around people who are at high risk?
@CDCgov@fema Furthermore, the CDC guidance specifies for a close contact: (1) 6 feet for 15 minutes over 24 hours is required for a close contact (2) after completing five days of isolation, a person is not considered a close contact.
Can we get scientist to tell OSHA that @covidisairborne and we need this to be acknowledged to protect workers? Comments are due January 19, 2022. These @DropletDiaries need to stop.
They try to get OSHA to accept outdoor transmission, but instead of accepting the ventilation outdoors, and the reasoning behind it (#COVIDisAirborne), OSHA tries to find other reasons.
Trying to find support for #dropletdogma, the CDC says masks provide protection for respiratory droplets. But COVID spreads by aerosols.