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Is it safe to go to museums in a pandemic? A guide


Kristen Rogers, CNN • Updated 29th April 2021
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Editor s Note There are few no-risk activities during the Covid-19 pandemic, but there are ways to mitigate risks. Fully vaccinated people are, of course, at much lower risk of contracting and spreading coronavirus than people who haven t been vaccinated. CNN Medical Analyst Dr. Leana Wen advises approaching your activity decisions with that in mind.
(CNN) At this point in the pandemic, you might be wondering whether you can swap virtual museum tours for immersive, in-person experiences.
The answer partly depends on the type of museum and your vaccination status. Coronavirus spreads when infected people cough, sneeze or talk and others breathe in those droplets, or when the virus flows through or accumulates in the air. The risk of these modes of transmission increases when many people are gathered closely together and indoors, which could be the case at museums. ....

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#LIFE: Staying HEALTHY at the SALON or SPA as we get back to NORMAL! | Mix 98.1


By www.iHeartToby.com
Apr 29, 2021
Ready to get a real haircut or massage again? Many of us are after a year’s worth of pandemic stress. So now that more people are getting vaccinated, is it safe to go back to salons and spas for blowouts, mani-pedis, facials and highlights? It can be, if we focus on just getting the service we want and don’t expect the longer experience we’ve enjoyed in the past.
Regina Davis Moss, associate executive director of health policy and practice at the American Public Health Association says getting services as quickly as possible will minimize our risk of getting COVID. ....

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Is it safe to go to salons and spas in a pandemic? A guide


Is it safe to go to salons and spas in a pandemic? A guide
CNN
4/28/2021
By Kristen Rogers, CNN
© Denis Lovrovic/AFP/Getty Images
Hairdresser Marko Stanzl wears a face mask and cuts a client s hair in his salon in Zagreb, Croatia, on May 4, 2020, as the country started gradually loosening its pandemic lockdown.
You may be wondering whether more people getting Covid-19 vaccinations means you can finally safely get a real haircut or have a masseuse knead away more than a year s worth of pandemic stress.
Salon or spa services like blowouts or line-ups, mani-pedis, or full-body massages don t happen without the kind of close proximity to others that increases Covid-19 risk. Coronavirus spreads when infected people cough, sneeze or talk and others breathe in those droplets, or when virus accumulates in or flows through the air. People can also contract coronavirus from contaminated surfaces, but this mode of transmission is less common, ....

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Vaccinated Era Is Near, but Not Without Continued Virus Safety


As infection rates of Covid-19 rise, or in some cases only plateau, across the United States, experts say those who haven’t gotten their shots yet may be relaxing safeguards too soon. 
Dave Bailey accompanies his son, Walter, on a socially distanced grid before Walter’s first day back to in person school in April 2021. (Courthouse News photo / Karina Brown)
(CN)  With millions of Covid-19 vaccine doses being given to Americans by the day, and public health officials announcing pieces of normal life that can resume post-vaccination, it’s understandable that many are feeling a sense that, after more than a year, the pandemic’s end is near.  ....

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COVID-19 Made It Impossible to Keep Ignoring Racial Disparities in Health Care—Here's What's Needed for Health Equity


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COVID-19 Made It Impossible to Ignore Racial Disparities in Health Care. Here s What s Needed for Equity
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COVID-19 Made It Impossible to Ignore Racial Disparities in Health Care. Here s What s Needed for Equity
COVID isn t the only illness or condition that disproportionately affects communities of color, but it s the one that opened the entire nation s eyes to health inequality—and helped create a push to fix the gaps in medical access and care.
March 01, 2021
Three days a week, Philadelphian Wanda Callands woke up hours before the sun. She had to in order to be on time for her job at a local YMCA, where from 4:45 until 11:00 a.m. she was the temperature screener for anyone entering the facility. While her position is not listed as essential by the CDC, she faced the public every day in the midst of the pandemic. ....

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