
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


There’s a growing public health argument about how people should calculate risk when it comes to social distancing. Many states are now lifting stay-at-home restrictions, summer is around the corner, and people in the third month of what many hoped would be a weeks-long disruption are desperate to visit friends and get outside. That means we will be socializing a lot more--in many cases, without clear guidelines as to what’s really risky. Kristen V. Brown reports that as we learn more about how the virus spreads, and what constitutes risky behavior, messaging from experts will have to become a little more nuanced than just “stay home, stay safe.”
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
 By Bloomberg
By Bloomberg3.7
805805 ratings
There’s a growing public health argument about how people should calculate risk when it comes to social distancing. Many states are now lifting stay-at-home restrictions, summer is around the corner, and people in the third month of what many hoped would be a weeks-long disruption are desperate to visit friends and get outside. That means we will be socializing a lot more--in many cases, without clear guidelines as to what’s really risky. Kristen V. Brown reports that as we learn more about how the virus spreads, and what constitutes risky behavior, messaging from experts will have to become a little more nuanced than just “stay home, stay safe.”
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

91,067 Listeners

21,985 Listeners

78,320 Listeners

43,567 Listeners

14,344 Listeners

407 Listeners

2,169 Listeners

421 Listeners

1,384 Listeners

965 Listeners

112,499 Listeners

56,383 Listeners

192 Listeners

15,550 Listeners

3,301 Listeners

16,240 Listeners

6,211 Listeners

67 Listeners

31 Listeners

4 Listeners

155 Listeners

58 Listeners

232 Listeners

229 Listeners

9,121 Listeners

60 Listeners

63 Listeners

83 Listeners

381 Listeners

22 Listeners

12 Listeners

986 Listeners

7 Listeners

2 Listeners

76 Listeners