Selected article for: "risk reduce and SARS transmission"

Author: Jane M Lim; Zaw Myo Tun; Vishakha Kumar; Sharon Quaye; Vittoria Offeddu; Alex R Cook; May Oo Lwin; Shaohai Jiang; Clarence C Tam
Title: Population anxiety and positive behaviour change during the COVID-19 epidemic: Cross-sectional surveys in Singapore, China and Italy
  • Document date: 2020_4_17
  • ID: 7yucn30u_53
    Snippet: Current evidence indicates that SARS-CoV-2 transmission risk is most likely to result from close contact in households, large social gatherings or workplaces. 3 However, respondents in Singapore and China reported that transmission was most likely in places such as shopping malls and public transportation and least likely at home. This corresponds with respondents' self-reported mask wearing intentions; most respondents in both countries said tha.....
    Document: Current evidence indicates that SARS-CoV-2 transmission risk is most likely to result from close contact in households, large social gatherings or workplaces. 3 However, respondents in Singapore and China reported that transmission was most likely in places such as shopping malls and public transportation and least likely at home. This corresponds with respondents' self-reported mask wearing intentions; most respondents in both countries said that they would not wear a face mask at home to reduce their risk of infection but would wear them out in public, signaling a need for better messaging around infection prevention within the household.

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