ArianeEmory
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- May 13, 2013
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It's not about how many people are currently in the store, it's how many people have BEEN in the store the hours before IMO. The aerosols remain in the air for hours. Also a place with better circulation is better than a place with bad circulation.
Snipping because:
I've had covid once, late 2021, and I'm 99% confident I got it while grocery shopping (masked, although it wasn't a great mask--I have better ones now). At that time, I was the only person working at my physical office, everyone else was working from home. My spouse already worked from home since before the pandemic. We hadn't seen anyone in person but each other for the prior week, other than my 15 minute shopping trip to a Trader Joe's. I also used their restroom, which may have been my downfall. I am fanatic about hand cleanliness, but I bet the air just wasn't circulated well enough in the restrooms. After having successfully avoided it for two years, needless to say I was kicking myself.
(Didn't have a terribly intense illness; I was vaccinated although I'm pretty sure Omicron was dominant in my state by then. I did have tinnitus for two months afterwards.)