I’m moving out soon and I’m thinking of moving into this beautiful pre-war building. I’m worried though about covid spreading and I’m wondering what precautions people living in apartments currently are taking.

Thing is I can find an apartment with a private entrance and in-unit wash/dryer, which would probably be better for covid, but this building is just nicer - better location, maintained better, it seems like the landlord is more present and responsive. Idk it’s a better deal, I’m just worried about covid.

  • s3p5r@lemm.ee
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    10 hours ago

    From the link you gave me, emphasis mine:

    First, larger respiratory droplets that rapidly settle onto surfaces, typically within 1–2 meters of the source, are amenable to hand hygiene, social distancing, and face masks. Second, albeit with more limited direct evidence, is aerosolization and spread of smaller respiratory droplets, or droplet nuclei, primarily <0.5 micrometers in final size, capable of staying suspended in air for hours and requiring filtering or ventilation for interdiction (2–4).

    This is the same thing as what I said. Complete with caveat that you need to mask, wash your hands and not touch stuff. I get being cautious but… you’ve removed a comment which said the same thing as your correction, including choice of word.

    Annex C: Respiratory droplets from Atkinson J, Chartier Y, Pessoa-Silva CL, et al., editors. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2009.

    Additionally, the definition of an aerosol is a suspension of fine solid particles or liquid droplets in air or another gas.

    I’m fine with leaving the comments gone, but in the interests of good intentions and being mostly right, I think it’s worth reconsidering the aerosol/droplet reasoning for future mod actions.

    • ButtBidet [he/him]@hexbear.netM
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      9 hours ago

      “COVID is spread via water droplets and touch… and additional measures are pretty worthless” and COVID “don’t waft around on it’s own” is factually wrong and and mildly dangerous if left unchallenged. I don’t want to be a dick, but I have a responsibility to comrades here trying to keep themselves safe.

      Literally any mod or admin can reverse my decision. But honestly I’d just move on, it’s not something worth getting upset over.

      • s3p5r@lemm.ee
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        9 hours ago

        I’m upset that you’re ignoring the science, even the science you provided. The comments are whatever, which is why I suggested reconsidering the definitions of the terms for future actions instead of reinstating the comments.

        Water droplets, or, if you prefer, respiratory droplets, or even aerosols, is how COVID travels through the air and settles on objects. That’s what the link you gave me explicitly says, and it is what I said. It does not waft around without that medium, to suggest it does is factually incorrect and not backed by any science.

        • ButtBidet [he/him]@hexbear.netM
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          9 hours ago

          Guy, you stated that we don’t need to have ventilators in closed rooms because COVID is a spread through droplet form, not “wafting” around like an aerosol. I’m being really nice, but this is started to get to debate bro behaviour. I’m middle aged, and I have better things to do than listen to you pretend that you didn’t say something that’s factually incorrect.

          • s3p5r@lemm.ee
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            8 hours ago

            Guy

            Not cool, please don’t.

            you stated that we don’t need to have ventilators in closed rooms

            When you’re alone, in your own apartment, with a closed door, yeah. That’s why lockdowns were effective at preventing transmission. I also said ventilation was necessary when in rooms with other people, especially when you can’t distance.

            I have better things to do than listen to you pretend that you didn’t say something that’s factually incorrect.

            I corrected myself to be more specific when I realised I hadn’t been clear enough, and I backed up the specifics with science. I’m sorry that you feel that isn’t sufficient. Feel free to do the things, I’m out.