字幕列表 影片播放 列印英文字幕 - [Woman] Should I wear a mask? - [Man] Can I see my friends yet? How close are we to a vaccine? (upbeat music) - Hi, my name is Erin Bromage. I am a Professor of Biology where I focus on immunology and the controlled infectious diseases. - My name is Dr. Stephen Morse. I'm Professor of Epidemiology at the Mehlman School of Public Health. - [Woman] Is it safe to fly right now? - So determining whether you want to fly or not is really a personal choice that needs to be made based on a lot of different factors. - Do you need to, how important is it to do it? - If you have any of the comorbidities that have been discussed then flying becomes a much more risky endeavor. - Where you going? Are you going to be going from someplace that doesn't have very much virus circulation to another place that may not have much virus circulating around? - Some of the other things you need to consider with flying is how common are new infections in the area that you're leaving from? So if you find yourself flying out of New York or out of New Jersey or even Massachusetts, out of Boston where we are seeing a lot of community spread, then getting on a plane with 100 or 200 other people presents a higher risk than what it would be if you were flying out of Alaska where they only had a handful of cases yesterday. - Probably there are as many dangers going to and from the airport and waiting in the airport. - [Man] Can I go to the beach? - If we maintain the precautions, especially social distancing, and if we are with other people, they should be people we know and trust. - The beach being outside allows you to physically separate from other groups, to create that needed space, that buffer that we need to get away from the respiratory emissions that could potentially infect you. - Not everyone is able or perhaps willing to maintain the social distancing we talk about. So some beaches have gotten very crowded. If so, I think you should head for another beach, try to find a more secluded spot. - So you can go to the beach but physical distancing is still important. - [Man] Can COVID-19 live in the water? - If you go to the beach and it's saltwater the chances are that there's gonna be a lot of dilution if there is any virus in there. Even if it could survive the tides are going to sweep it away, there's going to be a lot of water to dilute the virus. So there's probably very little risk in that situation. - This virus we haven't really studied in detail to know that yet. But if we look at other coronaviruses we know that infectious viral particles can persist in both fresh and saltwater for an extended period of time. Contracting it from the water would be very hard when we're dealing with an ocean or a large lake because it's not just exposure to the virus that gets you infected. It's exposure to enough virus. - [Man] Can I see my friends yet? - Any time that you possibly can have an interaction with your friends make sure that you're doing it outside. Outside is much safer than inside. 'Cause when we get inside the chance for transfer of the virus just through those tiny little droplets in the air is dramatically increased. - I think gradually we're expanding our circle to seeing more friends in small groups and limited settings. - Just understand that the longer that you spend with them, the closer that you are, the riskier that particular interaction becomes. - If you trust your friends and they trust you or if you've all been indoors staying home and not at risk of having been infected, you can probably see each other. - [Woman] When is it safe to see family again? - So seeing family again follows the same rules as everything else we've been talking about. You've got to think about the risk factors of your household and the people, your family that you're visiting. - There are so many grandparents, I'm in that category, who want to hug their grandchildren and see their grandchildren again. So that's a really hard decision. - If you're looking at visiting your mother or your grandmother or grandfather and they have a lot of comorbidities and age then you need to take much more precautions if you want to have that visit. - I think that gradually as we learn more things will open up a bit and a lot of the risk may very well be in how you get there and what happens in the interim. - [Man] Is it risky to stay in a hotel now? - So risk again comes down to personal factors. - Hotel rooms are always a difficult choice. - Any time that you interact with somebody or a new place you have a chance of becoming infected. - If you have to stay in a hotel because you're traveling look for a hotel that really seems to be enforcing good standards. - Some people become infected and don't become sick. Some people become infected and only get a little bit sick, then others get really sick and up to and including death. So you've gotta look at your risk factors about whether staying at a hotel is actually a risky endeavor. The risk from a hotel really comes down to how well that hotel is maintaining the cleanliness of their rooms, of their lobbies, of their elevators. - They should be wearing masks. They should have good hand hygiene, that is to say keeping their hands clean, and probably you'll see bottles of hand sanitizer for you to use. That's usually an indication that they're taking this seriously. - [Woman] Should I wear a mask? - You absolutely should be wearing a mask when you cannot physically distance all the time. - In China, they feel very strongly that masks are helpful. And we do know that masks can prevent the transmission from people who are infected. - A mask stops most of your respiratory droplets coming out. They get caught on the inside of the mask and just lowers the overall viral burden that's in the air. - So yes, we should wear masks. Many people have asked why didn't we do this earlier? And we probably should have. - [Man] When will it be safe to travel again? - Safety with traveling comes down again to risk factors. - I think it depends a lot on how you're going to travel. You know travel by car for example has always probably been pretty safe. But everything in life carries the risk. - I think we're going to find that travel in general though is very country focused for quite a while now. - So a lot of it is really taking precautions to reduce your risk and decide what's appropriate for you and what's appropriate for the people you come in contact with. - [Man] What if someone sneezes on you? - If someone sneezes on you, ninja roll away as quickly as you can. - I think it depends on where and how they sneeze. - So a sneeze can emit thousands upon thousands of viral particles, infectious viral particles into the air. So that's why we need the six feet space. That's why we need masks. Because a mask in six feet space will stop any of those droplets coming towards you. - If we're keeping that social distancing, hopefully we would take a few steps back. If we're close and they're sneezing on us, you know I certainly wouldn't want to be anywhere near them. This is why we want people to wear masks to protect not only themselves but to protect others when they're sneezing, for example. - [Man] How close are we to a COVID-19 vaccine? - Our fastest vaccine that we've produced to date is about four and half years. So if we go by old standards we're looking at four to potentially 10 years for a vaccine. The upside with this particular vaccine is that I have never seen more companies focused on a singular effort than this one. So with that alone that gives me much more hope that we will get out of the bench phase and into the phase one, two, and three trials faster. - There's a lot of hope obviously for a vaccine and the answer is we don't really know. The speed with which vaccines are being developed and tested is unprecedented. So I'm hopeful that we will have some vaccines soon. - Even though you may not be concerned about your own health understand that you actually do have a role in this and that you may be part of the transmission chain that leads to it getting into a nursing home or getting into a school or getting it into a place where people aren't so fortunate with their health and that can lead to devastating outcomes of that group of people. - I hope we'll learn some good lessons from this. One lesson is that if we'd acted quickly on the global level as well as nationally we could have probably prevented many of the infections and deaths we see today. (dramatic music)
B1 中級 疾病專家解答您關於複診的燃眉之急。 (Disease Experts Answer Your Burning Questions About Reopening) 3 0 Summer 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日 更多分享 分享 收藏 回報 影片單字