How the Guest Enters the Room
When someone who has COVID-19 talks, coughs, or sneezes, they send tiny invisible pieces called droplets into the air, like when you blow bubbles and they float away. If another person is close by, these droplets can land on them, just like a bubble landing on your hand.
How the Guest Can Be Invisible
Sometimes the guest doesn’t even need to be seen, if someone is near a sick person and talks or sings (like in a choir), they might get infected without even knowing it. It’s like the guest hides behind a curtain and still gets you!
The Guest Likes Crowded Places
If there are lots of people in one place, like at a park or school, the guest can move more easily from person to person, like when kids pass around a ball in a game.
The Guest Can Stay for a While
The invisible pieces can hang out on surfaces, like toys and doorknobs. If you touch them and then touch your face, you might invite the guest into your body!
The Guest Can Be Stopped
Wearing masks is like putting up a net, it catches some of those tiny droplets before they fly too far.
That’s how the sneaky guest works!
Examples
- Wearing a mask helps stop droplets from spreading when someone coughs.
- Touching a doorknob that an infected person used can lead to infection later.
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