
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.
3.7
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.
6,133 Listeners
30,845 Listeners
402 Listeners
32,291 Listeners
431 Listeners
22,074 Listeners
2,174 Listeners
43,483 Listeners
25,875 Listeners
966 Listeners
111,917 Listeners
56,231 Listeners
196 Listeners
9,568 Listeners
5,441 Listeners
16,043 Listeners
65 Listeners
6,271 Listeners
31 Listeners
15,335 Listeners
155 Listeners
2 Listeners
10,613 Listeners
55 Listeners
50 Listeners
7 Listeners
198 Listeners
12 Listeners
232 Listeners
17 Listeners
54 Listeners
85 Listeners
371 Listeners
47 Listeners
65 Listeners