We're a Covid conscious company.
We:
๐ Minimise working together (allow WFH)
๐ฒ Monitor CO2
๐ช๏ธ Have air filtration on timers
๐ท Provide 3M Aura masks
๐งช Have LFTs (& will buy them)
๐ท Provide paid sick leave for isolation/illness
It's not hard.
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Taking each point in turn, here's why we do what we do:
๐ We allow people to WFH when poss to try to minimise interactions between staff. A few workarounds were needed.
Why--we care about our staff & their families back home & allowing this flexibility helps to reduce risk.
2/
๐ฒ We monitor CO2 because it gives us a good proxy for risk. We know that if the CO2 level builds we need to open windows & doors & sometimes use a fan to force extraction. Target 600ppm CO2.
Why--because it lowers the risk to our staff to reduce the amount of shared breath.
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๐ช๏ธ We have filtration on timers. We've made our own DIY filters with @3M filtrete panels on pedestal fans for easy deployment & portability. We have them on wi-fi timers to start an hour before we enter and run and hour after we leave.
Why--because it massively reduces risk.
4/
๐ท We provide free 3M Aura FFP2 masks. We've found them to be the best-fitting & most comfy masks. Worn when any 2 or more people share indoor air. Nobody has any issue wearing them as we care for each other.
Why--high quality masks reduce aerosol expelled into air & inhaled.
5/
๐งช We encourage people to use LFTs if they suspect exposure, feel symptoms or have been in a high risk environment. When they are no longer available from Gov't, we will buy them & supply to staff.
Why--because it is the only way to provide feedback on infection status.
6/
๐ท We provide paid leave for people to isolate if they are positive and also if they remain ill.
Why--because we care for them and don't want the to lose out on their income but also because we want to protect every other person who works in or enters our workplace.
7/
We take other measures too like being careful when we have deliveries or collections. Nobody can enter unmasked.
I want my staff to think - AIR QUALITY first.
How do we control what we breathe and how do we reduce risk to anyone in our environment.
8/
The effect of all this. Well so far, everyone has remained free of Covid. People actually feel safe at work and valued.
We don't want illness--we can't function as well and we recognise the potential for Long Covid. If we can reduce that risk--we absolutely should.
9/
So I want to encourage every business to be a #CovidConsciousCompany.
It took some thought & a few changes to the way we operate. It costs us a few ยฃ to keep the safety measures in place.
But it isn't hard.
It is the right thing to do.
Every business should do it.
10/end
โข โข โข
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I did a bit more digging about a recent BBC news article about how installing air quality monitors had a 'dramatic' effect on health.
It is an initiative by @sthelenscouncil and @WarringtonBC called the Healthy Air for Healthy Lungs project.
So what's it all about?...
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The program targets households with kids aged 2 to 10 who have respiratory conditions.
Applicants get a home assessment of their IAQ situation.
Participants get advice on how to improve their home's air quality; guidance on cooking, cleaning, heating and ventilation practices.
2/
St Helens Council distributed 150 monitors and has a waiting list for new applications.
Shows me that when people embrace & understand the benefits of clean air, there's a demand for it.
Feedback has been extremely positive.
IAQ sensors give people info they can act upon.
3/
Latest UKHSA blog:
"With tuberculosis (TB) on the rise again, how can we prevent further spread?"
Well guys it's airborne so airborne precautions, right?
"The infection is spread when a person with TB in their lungs or throat coughs or sneezes."
Oh FFS
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"How frontline healthcare professionals can help reduce TB"
Airborne precautions - respirators, improved ventilation and air filtration, right?
"It is essential that at risk groups and healthcare workers know the signs and symptoms of TB and seek out a timely diagnosis"
Oh FFS
2/
"UKHSA is working with partners across the healthcare system to understand how we can best refocus efforts to eliminate this preventable and treatable infection."
What specifically are you doing to prevent it @UKHSA?
It seems nothing at all as far as I can see.
3/
Most folk understand that HIV is very harmful long after the acute infection.
Most people think that Covid does nothing at all after acute infection.
The difference in understanding, I fear, could just be time.
It took many years for this to be widely acknowledged for HIV.
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I'm not aiming to draw a parallel between the two viruses - just that of our decades-old understanding of HIV and the comparative novelty of Covid and the way it is ignored.
But knowing what you know, if HIV was airborne and there were no treatments, would you ignore it?
2/
Let's also consider that currently, we simply don't know all of the latent long term effects of Covid infection & reinfection.
What we do know is cause for concern.
If we discover in 5, 10 or 20 years time that it has a massively detrimental effect on the brain for example...
3/
Listening to a neuroscientist explaining that it's worrying seeing how covid affects vessels, cells & neurons in the brain; long term effects unknown.
A cardiologist talking about heart, blood vessel & endothelium damage.
Are you personally sure that Covid can be ignored?
1/๐งต
If so, why?
It's absolutely clear that there is still more that we don't understand than what we already know. But what we know is reason for significant concern. Read up on it.
It bothered me greatly when pediatricians came out so quickly to say there's no risk to children.
2/
With a completely new virus, it takes a long time and an awful lot of research to be able to reach such a conclusion and it's clear that couldn't possibly have known when Govs also declared it 'mild' and akin to a bad cold.
There are hundreds of thousands of research papers.
3/
This is an example of just how much we have started to disrespect infectious diseases; Football today:
Going into the match, Palmer's involvement was in doubt after he missed training with a fever but insisted on playing to "help the team".
It seems we no longer understand.
1/๐งต
It's twofold:
We have lost respect for isolation when ill to protect others.
We have no understanding of how the body needs rest during & after infection.
And when I say we, I mean the general public.
And why - because of Covid and the way Public Health had to lie to cover up.
2/
And the media have been told to be complicit and never make a big deal out of it. To talk about it in past tense, to characterize it as mild and akin to a common cold. To belittle those suffering with Long Covid and make it appear psychological.
It's backfiring.
3/
2.8M people with long term sickness.
"the do nothing trajectory is that it's set to rise to 4M; we have to act on this"
Well @patmcfaddenmp your party have expertise in doing nothing. You're creating more long term ill health by doing nothing to reduce Covid transmissions.
1/๐งต
Perhaps instead of punishing people who have become ill through poor infection control everywhere but especially in schools as well as all health and social care settings, you could actually do something.
You know how to reduce infections.
Your party was very vocal about it.
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Your former Health Minister Andrew Gwynne knew all too well about the ongoing risk of Long Covid as well as the importance of masks in healthcare and clean air. In fact your health sec and Edu sec both made pleas to the Cons Gov to implement these changes in ventilation.
3/