How workers and students could be safely rotated into buildings to minimize COVID-19 infections, according to researchers
AP Photo/Mary Altaffer
- As businesses and schools around the US begin to reopen, some administrators are looking into using rotation plans as a safe way to maintain social distancing.
- Rotation schedules allow for fewer people to be inside a building at one time, and reduce potential infections by keeping the same group of coworkers or students together each day.
- If an organization has a robust and speedy system to detect new infections, the different groups can swap in and out more frequently. If not, it's better to rotate as infrequently as possible, only every month or even less.
- Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.
As schools and businesses consider whether they can reopen safely, many are exploring rotation plans, in which groups of students or employees take turns inhabiting the physical space. The basic ideas behind rotation are simple: bringing fewer people together allows for easier social distancing, while staggering schedules can help minimize transmission of COVID-19.
"When you don't know whether an infection has started in an organization — and if it has, how far along it's progressed — you can still try to manage the spread of this invisible potential infection by controlling who interacts with whom," said Jeffrey Ely, a professor of managerial economics and decision sciences (courtesy) at the Kellogg School, who is also a professor of economics at Northwestern.
See the rest of the story at Business Insider
NOW WATCH: The rise and fall of Donald Trump's $365 million airline
See Also:
- What leaders can learn from astronauts to build more connected remote teams
- Our nation has never been less American than in 2020, when 'freedom' is used as an excuse to ignore the common good, says NYU professor Scott Galloway
- 10 tricks that make you instantly more likable, according to an emotional intelligence author
READ MORE: Welcome to the future of dining halls: reservations, delivery, and robots
SEE ALSO: What the US can learn from countries who have successfully reopened schools during the pandemic
from Feedburner https://ift.tt/33LNtJe
No comments