Our simulation town is small

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zakiyatasnim
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Joined: Tue Jan 07, 2025 4:52 am

Our simulation town is small

Post by zakiyatasnim »

As health experts expected, it turned out to be impossible to completely isolate the sick population from the healthy.

Thus, Leana Wen, former Baltimore City Health Commissioner, says about the inexpediency of forced quarantine:

"Many people work in the city and live in neighboring counties, and vice versa. Will people be separated from their families? How will every road be blocked? How will supplies reach residents?"

Lawrence O. Gostin, professor of global health law at Georgetown University, argues:

"The truth is that such lockdowns are very rare and never effective."

Moderate social distancing
Fortunately, there are other ways to slow the outbreak. First and kuwait number data foremost, health officials should encourage people to avoid public gatherings, stay home more often, and keep their distance from others.

If people are less mobile and interact less with each other, the virus has less opportunity to spread. Some people are still going out. Maybe they can't stay home because of their jobs or other responsibilities, or they simply refuse to heed public health warnings. These people are not only more likely to get sick, but they are also more likely to spread our simulitis.

Let's see what happens when a quarter of our population continues to move around while the other three quarters adopt a strategy that health experts call "social distancing."

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Thanks to social distancing, even more people are becoming healthy, while people can be isolated from public places.

“We control the desire to be in public places by closing public spaces. Italy is closing all its restaurants. China is closing everything, and now we are closing too. Reducing opportunities for gathering helps people maintain social distance,” said Drew Harris, a population researcher and associate professor in the College of Public Health at Thomas Jefferson University.
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