A consensus seems to be emerging that many more infections happen indoors than out. So I could imagine a transition from quarantine in which people leave the buildings they live in, but avoid going into other ones.
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Replying to @paulg
What, in your opinion, does this mean for the future of workplaces? Principally what large changes might this entail?
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Replying to @thinkshirish
Long-term, not much. I'm just talking about the next 6-12 months.
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Replying to @paulg @thinkshirish
reassuring that some data from NY suggests healthcare workers have slightly less rates of infection than the general public. So masks and copiously available hand sanitizer can work...
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Healthcare workers do not have lower rates of infection. They have lower rates of hospitalization. Because most healthcare workers are not obese cancerous seniors.
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GrepMed Retweeted Nate Silver
https://twitter.com/natesilver538/status/1258422019668037633?s=21 …https://twitter.com/NateSilver538/status/1258422019668037633 …
GrepMed added,
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