A harper tells me that Paul Rubin said:
I'm sad to hear this, and hope for quick and complete recovery for
everyone. The most important precautions don't seem to get much
attention, and those are ventilation and air filtration. See:
https://lbourouiba.mit.edu/image-gallery/heathy-teaching
about how to set that up for a classroom.
The main programme room wasn't too badly ventilated, but the rooms used
for late night filking were harder to ventilate without also making the
room a mite chilly. The high winds and heavy rain at times didn't help,
as windows had to be closed to keep the rain out...
I'm aware of 27 positives so far.
A "test every morning" policy only really stands a chance if the tests
can be relied upon to detect cases very early in the infectious stage.
With some of the variants currently active, that would not seem to be
the case. Sometimes, tests have turned positive before symptoms
developed, but some people developed (mostly mild cold-like rather than flu-like or classic COVID) symptoms while continuing to test negative,
and only started getting positive tests two or three days after the
onset of those symptoms.
Fingers crossed, thumbs pressed, that nobody develops a severe case.
--
..Rick Hewett
http://www.hewett.org/
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