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Living Through COVID-19: How to Decide What’s Safe

Being in full lockdown mode—sheltering at home, with most businesses closed—might have been frustrating, but at least the ground rules were clear. You went somewhere or did something only if you absolutely had to.

Now, as public life reopens and summer activities beckon, it’s important to remember that the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic isn’t over. We don’t yet have an effective treatment or a vaccine, but everyone is eager to get back to some semblance of normalcy.

So what’s OK to do, and what’s not?

There are no black-and-white answers, the experts say. You have to examine what matters to you.

“I have had many friends and family members ask me, can I do this, or should I do this?” says Emily Sickbert-Bennett, PhD, director of UNC Medical Center Infection Prevention. “As we begin to reintroduce interactions back into our lives, I think it’s important for everyone to consider what’s most important to them, because we can’t go back to doing all things at once.”

For some people, that might be time with family. For others, it might be regular trips to the gym or the beach. The key is to decide what you want to do, and then assess how (and whether) you can do it safely.

Here are some important things to consider, Dr. Sickbert-Bennett says:

Every person and situation is unique, but UNC Health experts offered some activity-specific advice for the following dilemmas that you might face before the pandemic is over:

 


For the latest information on COVID-19, visit the CDC website and the UNC Health COVID-19 Resources page, and follow UNC Health on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and YouTube.

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