Is this still relevant?
Rt COVID-19
I haven’t been checking daily
Seems like for a while there it was mostly green.
Behind a paywall sorry. Clear your cookies
Brigham and Women’s COVID-19 cluster illustrates challenges in controlling infection - The Boston Globe
Experts say leadership, vigilance, and culture change are needed, along with more space to gather and eat at safe distances
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Another aspect of human nature that bedevils infection control efforts is a phenomenon known as “drift,” Salvador said. As people avoid infections by adhering to safe practices, they can lose sight of the true risk. Slight deviations from infection-control protocols become normal, like driving 72 miles per hour in a 65-mile-per-hour zone. “I drove 72 and I didn’t crash. Now I’m going to drive 90,” Salvador said.
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By July, the COVID-19 surge in Massachusetts had eased; hospitals were no longer packed with COVID-19 patients. “People had gotten a little more comfortable that things were going well,” Salvador said. “There had been a laxity in some of the infection control practices,” particularly in wearing of face masks and social distancing.
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“The hospital is a really safe place to be, especially compared to many places people are going,” said Dr. Shira I. Doron, an infectious disease physician and hospital epidemiologist at Tufts Medical Center. The number of outbreaks is small considering the "millions and millions of hospital admissions during the course of the pandemic.
More at link
Re Hospital culture, testing issues (what???), human nature, leadership and vigilance, etc