- Rachel Reiff Ellis
- Wear a Mask. Even if you don't show symptoms, you could carry the COVID-19 virus. People more than 2 years old should wear a cloth face mask in public. You don’t need the kind of face masks that health care workers wear.
- Wash Your Hands. Soap, water, and some scrubbing are all it takes to kill viruses on your hands. You probably already know the usual times you should wash your hands, including before and after you handle food and after you
- Don’t Touch Your Face. Your eyes, nose, and mouth are a direct path into your body for viruses. Scratch your nose, rub your eyes, or bite a hangnail, and you let germs inside.
- Sneeze or Cough Into Your Elbow. If you sneeze or cough into your hands, you coat them with germs. If you don't cover your sneezes and coughs at all, it rockets your germs into the air around you toward others.
13/08/2021 · Know how coronavirus (COVID-19) spreads and take steps to protect yourself and others. Avoid close contact, clean your hands often, cover coughs and sneezes, stay home if you’re sick, and know how to clean and disinfect.
02/10/2021 · PREVENTION & ADVICE. There is currently no vaccine to prevent coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). The best way to prevent illness is to avoid being exposed to this virus. Stay aware of the latest information on the COVID-19 outbreak, available on the WHO website and through your national and local public health authority.
- Wash your hands frequently and carefully. Use warm water and soap and rub your hands for at least 20 seconds. Work the lather to your wrists, between your fingers, and under your fingernails.
- Avoid touching your face. SARS-CoV-2 can live on some surfaces for up to 72 hours. You can get the virus on your hands if you touch a surface like: gas pump handle.
- Stop shaking hands and hugging people — for now. Similarly, avoid touching other people. Skin-to-skin contact can transmit SARS-CoV-2 from one person to another.
- Don’t share personal items. Do not share personal items like: phones. makeup. combs. It’s also important not to share eating utensils and straws. Teach children to recognize their reusable cup, straw, and other dishes for their own use only.
- Wear your mask. Wearing a mask that covers your mouth and nose can prevent those who have COVID-19 from spreading the virus to others. Recent evidence suggests that masks may even benefit the wearer, offering some level of protection against infections.
- Stay socially distant. COVID-19 spreads mainly among people who are within 6 feet of one another (about two arms’ length) for a prolonged period (at least 15 minutes).
- Keep washing your hands. Washing your hands—and well—remains a key step to preventing COVID-19 infection. Wash your hands with soap often, and especially after you have been in a public place or have blown your nose, coughed, or sneezed, the CDC recommends.
- Keep holiday gatherings small. Fall and winter also bring holidays, when many families get together. This can be especially tricky for those of us who live in parts of the country where it will no longer be easy to gather outside.
29/11/2020 · There are also some prevention tips for different settings and situations to help a person protect themselves and others from coronavirus. Prevention in the household . The most valuable ...
- Beth Sissons
Infection prevention and control; Points of entry and mass gatherings ; Naming the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) and the virus that causes it; Risk communication and community engagement; Country-level coordination, planning, and monitoring; Critical pre ...





