If you or someone you know may be considering suicide or need help, call 988 or message the Crisis Text Line by texting HOME to 741741.
CHOW is a Colorado-specific group that offers mental health resources, meetings, and courses for free to those in the restaurant industry.
The short answer is nothing, other than consider using bottled water if you’re immunocompromised or have young children or elderly family members with weaker immune systems. The risk to healthy adults is very low, and they’re warning the public as a precaution. Be on the lookout for diarrheal illness, and seek medical attention if you become ill - be sure to mention that you live in the Crypto-affected area when you do.
Source: CDC
We definitely recommend having medical waste or sharps containers in your bathrooms, especially if they’re semi-public. They help reduce the chances of accidental needlesticks or bloodborne pathogen exposure from those using illicit drugs in your bathrooms. But even more common, they serve to support people with diabetes and other medical conditions who need a safe place to dispose of needles and other medical waste. We’ve seen employees who are excited not to have to carry individual sharps containers to work when they need to inject insulin, regular customers who need somewhere to change a colostomy bag, and everything in between. If you do add one, you may need to register with the state or local authorities. Contact your local health department for legal requirements for medical waste and to set up a disposal program.
Source: ZHH
If you have gotten all your previous shots from one brand, there’s some evidence that you’ll have a little more protection if you get one dose from the other brand. For example, if your initial doses were Pfizer and you haven’t gotten a booster yet, Moderna might increase your immune response slightly. But the benefit is minimal, and the science is still a bit mixed on this, so we just recommend that you get whatever brand is available when you make your appointment.
Source: YLE
Animal to human viral transmission likely caused the COVID pandemic and is likely to cause the next one, too. Scientists are studying urban animals and the diseases they carry to understand the potential risks.