Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Very low risk of outdoors transmission child to child.
I was getting very comfortable with my kids outside and playing sports.
A kid in our soccer league tested positive. Family thinks the kid got covid at soccer because he isn’t in any other activities.
OK, but what happened next? Was there a large outbreak throughout the team? That's what I'm more interested in. Of course people are still getting it, and we may never know where or how (did he go to a store? is someone in his family asymptomatic? did he play with a neighbor friend? idk, it may be soccer, but it may not). The more important thing for me is what happens after one person gets it. Does it spread very easily to others? If it does not, I'd say the soccer league is doing a good job with precautions, and/or the risk of transmission in that situation was low to begin with.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Very low risk of outdoors transmission child to child.
I was getting very comfortable with my kids outside and playing sports.
A kid in our soccer league tested positive. Family thinks the kid got covid at soccer because he isn’t in any other activities.
Anonymous wrote:Very low risk of outdoors transmission child to child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What outbreaks have you heard of happening at playgrounds?
Is it zero risk? Probably not. But all the evidence shows that outdoors activities present very little, very low risk.
Some people will accept nothing less than absolute zero. Which is fine for them. But others have a risk tolerance where "very very low" is fine. You have to decide what's best for your own family.
Thanks Trump.
Outdoors + masks + 6 feet = very little risk.
Only one of the three (outdoors) is risky indeed.
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/daily-life-coping/deciding-to-go-out.html
Anonymous wrote:What outbreaks have you heard of happening at playgrounds?
Is it zero risk? Probably not. But all the evidence shows that outdoors activities present very little, very low risk.
Some people will accept nothing less than absolute zero. Which is fine for them. But others have a risk tolerance where "very very low" is fine. You have to decide what's best for your own family.