Conversation

Replying to
The microCOVID project suggests an interesting angle: set a risk budget (eg 1% chance of infection / year). If 1 µCOVID = 1/million chance of infection, I can "spend" 192 µCOVID / week. Then it provides a calculator to help estimate the risk of everyday activities, in µCOVIDs.
1
8
18
Knowing my "budget," and using the calculator, I can stop worrying about masked park hangouts, since they're around 1 µCOVID. I could do that every day and "spend" only a fraction of my budget. Outdoor dinner? ~100 µCs. So once a week at most.
1
5
13
It's important not to be too literal about any of this, of course. The estimates are inexact; you can't aggregate "average risks" when tail risks are what matters. But I find this a helpful way to understand relative risks. I think it'll help me make less blanket self-policies.
1
2
16
Replying to
Still doubling your risk from shopping though, so a better question to ask yourself would be „would I be OK with going grocer shopping twice as often“. Still a great project/tool! Just shows reasoning about this is hard.
1
1