The coronavirus — a devious parasite — doesn't have to be the winner of the Super Bowl.
This virus preys on people gathering inside, talking, and eating. So as infections and hospitalizations have finally started dropping in the U.S., the nation's overwhelmed doctors, nurses, and essential workers would greatly benefit if this year's Super Bowl parties didn't allow the virus to spread, multiply, and, invariably, mutate even more.
In many places, infections spiked after Thanksgiving and Christmas. On Wednesday, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, offered some simple, levelheaded advice to avoid another spike: "...just lay low and cool it."
Laying low and cooling itsimply means enjoying the Super Bowl with people you live with, rather than mixing households, Dr. Fauci said.
Gathering with people outside your home continues to be a serious, and for many a deadly, problem. Unlike a previous coronavirus outbreak (SARS) in 2003, where infected people became sick quickly, this latest coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) has a prodigious number of healthy carriers.
With this virus, many infected people don't know they're infected, which could include you. Some 40 to 45 percent of infected people never experience symptoms, according to the CDC. And over half of infections are spread by people who either have no symptoms or don't have them yet(presymptomatic).
Tweet may have been deleted
Tweet may have been deleted
The CDC has some specific Super Bowl recommendations, too. They're basically Fauci's suggestions. "Gathering virtually or with the people you live with is the safest way to celebrate the Super Bowl this year," the CDC wrote.
If someone is compelled to gather with people they don't live with for the Super Bowl, the CDC says to at least gather outside — where's there's some ventilation.
See Also: When it's wise to wear a double mask
Even more reason to party carefully this Super Bowl season is that mutated, significantly more contagious coronavirus variants are now rapidly spreading around the U.S. If you're not careful, it's now easier to get infected.
"We need to double down on public health measures more than ever," Dr. Thomas Russo, the chief of infectious disease at the University of Buffalo's Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, told Mashable earlier this week.
文章
8
浏览
7
获赞
9198
This week in politics on Instagram: Breitbart vs. 'Feminist'
Every Tuesday in the run up to the Nov. 3, 2020 election, Mashable will break down the most viral poRussia's war on social media isn't going well, either
As the conflict between Russia and Ukraine unfolds, much of the world continues to watch via socialTelegram is blocked in Brazil because it didn't check its emails
UPDATE: Mar. 21, 2022, 12:09 p.m. Brazil has now lifted Telegram's ban, two days after it was officThe Ultimate 44 Used Graphics Card Pricing & Benchmark Guide
Along with our recent editorials on why it's a bad time to build a gaming PC (not least because of oTikTok will reportedly sell to Oracle after Microsoft bid rejected
Oracle has beat out Microsoft to win the bid for TikTok's U.S. operations, according to a report byBMW iX gets a CES makeover, including color
BMW is taking its first electric SUV to the next level with a color-changing exterior, a theater-likBest free online courses from Harvard University
TL;DR:A large bank of online courses from Harvard University are available to take for free on edX.eMeta's Instagram reintroduced a version of the chronological feed
Instagram just threw you a bone. Meta, the company formerly known as Facebook, announced Tuesday thaGMC revives gas
It may seem like an oxymoron that the massive, gas-guzzling GMC Hummer, once known as a symbol of ovBMW iX gets a CES makeover, including color
BMW is taking its first electric SUV to the next level with a color-changing exterior, a theater-likBest grocery deal: Spend $35 on select groceries at Amazon and save $10
SPEND $35, SAVE $10:As of Jan. 31, spend $35 on select groceries at Amazon and get $10 off your ordePeloton CEO steps down amid mass employee layoffs
Peloton, America's favorite at-home workout bike, is spinning out of style.The company saw a huge spFaceTime gets an upgrade on iPhone 12, just in time for the pandemic
Apple unveiled its iPhone 12 lineup at its October event, and one feature that should be pretty usefLG's 5 weirdest CES 2022 announcements
The annual Consumer Electronics Show is always a showcase for the most ambitious consumer tech cominThe Ember Mug 2 is a great gift — and it's on sale for $40 off
Save 31%: The 10-ounce Ember Mug 2 typically goes for $129.95, but as of Feb. 3, you can grab it for