Living With COVID...
Mar. 30th, 2022 12:38 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I live in a country and region where dengue fever is endemic. We all "live with" dengue. Nonetheless, my facilities manager is extremely careful about vector control, making sure that there is no standing water in the grounds or in the building. In the afternoon and the evening, we use mosquito repellent when we have to be outdoors. We kill mosquitoes when we see them. We live with dengue, and therefore we don't pretend it doesn't exist, and we do our best not to catch it. If a good dengue vaccine appears (there's hope for an mRNA vaccine, that might actually get all the serotypes), we will all get it.
"Living with COVID"? It should be the same for any sensible person.
"Living with COVID"? It should be the same for any sensible person.
no subject
Date: 2022-03-31 10:38 pm (UTC)In many ways she's sensible (she's had all the vaccines), in some ways though, the things she really needs - chatty regular social contact, the odd hug, the pensioner's weekly meal at the village hall, a cup of tea with a friend - are genuinely difficult masked and distanced when a bit deaf and a bit wobbly and not as focussed as she was. And particularly when depressed.
I've given up trying to lecture her: she knows what she should be doing, she just ...forgets. As humans do.
no subject
Date: 2022-04-03 03:34 am (UTC)Yes, during the various Asian lockdowns. it was quite clear that the elderly suffered badly from lack of their normal social contact.
Can she sew? It's not difficult to add another layer to a cloth mask, and even leave one side unstitched to form a pocket for an additional filter. Many of us did that in the early days, when disposables were being prioritised for the health care sector.