It's time to pay attn to indoor air quality, much like we do for outdoor air, or water. We spend 90% of our time indoors, and clean air is essential for our health and wellbeing. With thanks to @linseymarr @j_g_allen @CorsIAQ @kprather88 and @WBahnfleth https://t.co/P3JQTSDTQU
— Tanya Lewis (@tanyalewis314) June 8, 2022
Don't stop washing your hands, but DEFINITELY take care of your ventilation and air out your rooms.
— B'more City Health (@BMore_Healthy) December 25, 2021
Today it's WARM, so maybe open your windows for a bit.
Get an air purifier.
Got a furnace? Change those filters! https://t.co/3yQ6RRbSZp
๐Airborne virus implications: 200+ experts now declare that the coronavirus can stay aloft for hours in tiny droplets in stagnant air, infecting people who inhale. This risk is highest in crowded indoor spaces with poor ventilation. What does this mean?๐งตhttps://t.co/SNYPKnmXog
— Eric Feigl-Ding (@DrEricDing) July 8, 2020
Italian study shows ventilation can cut school COVID cases by 82% | Reuters https://t.co/LQ8nX7Mvju
— Dr Satoshi Akima FRACP ใ็ง้่ฐใ (@ToshiAkima) June 3, 2022
New @CDCMMWR looks at what K-12 schools are doing to improve ventilation to help reduce the spread of #COVID19. Most reported low-cost improvements like moving activities outside. Learn more: https://t.co/0iiWSpBoVn. pic.twitter.com/1FoLSdZrg8
— CDC (@CDCgov) June 8, 2022
improving ventilation is one of the best strategies we have for reducing COVID-19 risk in schools, yet many are about to reopen with the same air systems they had in 2020.
— betsy ladyzhets ๐ (@betsyladyzhets) August 16, 2022
for @TIME, I explored what schools should be doing and what's holding them back: https://t.co/YlCIKUe2Qa pic.twitter.com/Y3upFqML5M