This is the reality in many places. I'm hoping the new administration will quickly play catch-up with the messaging. It's finally mostly there in the guidelines, but needs messaging push. WHO needs a lot of catch-up as well. Fine print isn't enough.https://twitter.com/nacnudnosilla/status/1355944915763605504 …
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We may *finally* be at a turning point for aerosols and airborne transmission—not just lip service but real recognition. Few of the Twitter people who've been saying this—and working so hard to be heard—for a year:
@linseymarr@j_g_allen@kprather88@Don_Milton@ShellyMBoulderShow this thread -
There are others, too. The message about aerosols and airborne transmission was dismissed, resisted, attacked despite increasing evidence (again Japan/Hong Kong etc. had this by Feb 2020). When it's written, it will be an interesting and illuminating history of how things fail.
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Yes! Had them typed out and ran out of space and got distracted. Also
@jljcolorado has been doing tremendous bilingual, global work.https://twitter.com/happyhexer/status/1357175586200850435 …Show this thread
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Schools are going to have to have kiddos <6 feet apart in order to get them back to in-person learning (not enough room in classrooms for distancing). Anecdotal evidence from Ohio suggests that it can be done safely with masking *and good ventilation.* Your thoughts?
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