I'm not sure where the 6' number comes from, and I'm skeptical it really holds up as something I'd be comfortable maintaining for an extended period of time (If someone with c19 coughed at me from 6' away I would not feel very safe). I'm guessing the 6' is more like a quick rule for people who are only interacting briefly.
How much does it matter whether you're up/downwind? I've heard conflicting things about how airborne it might be.
I'm interested in this largely for "Okay, assuming we need to be careful about this for months at a time, what sort of practices could we use to maintain in-person social ties, indefinitely, without risk?" (i.e. going on long walks, visiting each other's house where 1-2 people hang out in the street or sidewalk and house denizens hang out on the porch, etc)
I'm guessing this has separate answers for "outdoor" and "indoor."
Current Answers:
- Indoors: Basically it's not safe.
- Outdoors: 10 meters (30 feet) seems safe, if nobody is upwind/downwind of each other. But I'm unclear what the falloff range is.
From "A choir group had 60 people show up for practice. Now 45 are sick.":
Given that they were spaced out and 1 asymptomatic person probably infected all 45 out of 60 in what must be a reasonably large room, it seems just impractical to keep sufficient distance to be safe indoors.
I suspect the inside issue is something that will eventually have to be addresses via ventilation and filtration (as in planes) and attention to just how the air flows seems important here. That probably doesn't get us back to distances pre-COVID-19 but at least gets to some new workable normal. (Unless we're giving up direct social interactions and go to pure virtual reality solutions).
Outside might still need some work I think. If you're thinking not overly crowded settings not nearly as much to worry about. However, things like open air m... (read more)