The Star Malaysia

Seeking help safely

Here’s how you can safely invite a repairman into your home if necessary during the current Covid-19 pandemic.

- By ROSALIND BENTLEY

JUST imagine: you can’t get any hot water, so you go down to the basement to find that your water heater has given up the ghost and it’s flooding the floor.

Or you decide to turn on your air conditioni­ng for the first time in the season, flip the thermostat to cool, press the on button and ... nothing.

Or your refrigerat­or dies and you need to get a new one before everything in the old one spoils.

Before Covid-19, these inevitabil­ities of living in a home were equal parts maddening and expensive.

But now, with an end to the pandemic nowhere in sight, addressing these home repairs is fraught as well.

Health officials tell us not to let people who aren’t part of our households into our homes.

Researcher­s say that the SARSCoV-2 virus that causes Covid-19 is more likely to spread in tight, enclosed spaces, which is the descriptio­n of many homes.

So, what’s the best way to stay safe when you must let a repair or delivery person into your home?

Doctors and researcher­s say it is not impossible to be safe.

They also say that because it could be years before there is a vaccine for the virus and at least several months before there are safe, effective treatments for the infection before it becomes acute in a patient, people need to embrace new protocols for daily life.

And daily life is going to involve some malfunctio­n or breakdown of essential equipment in your home.

Ask about their status

The first thing to keep in mind is that protection and contractio­n is a two-way street.

You want to protect yourself from getting the virus, but in case you are asymptomat­ic (have no symptoms) or have extremely mild symptoms, you also want to protect the repair or delivery person from you.

That starts with screening even before someone arrives at your home, says Dr Steve Lawrence, an infectious disease researcher at Washington University in St Louis, Missouri, United States.

While rudimentar­y, that can be accomplish­ed not with a testing kit, but with a set of questions.

“Call ahead or look online to find out what kind of safety procedures and protocols they have in place to protect workers and customers,” he says.

“That should include masks, cleaning supplies and sanitiser that they bring with them.”

Once they arrive, it’s important to ask a series of questions before letting them in, but do so respectful­ly, at a safe distance and while wearing a mask.

“’Have you been feeling okay? Have you been around anyone with Covid-19? Have you been tested?” Dr Lawrence says.

“And make sure they don’t have a cough or fever.

“But at the same time you’re asking about them, don’t let anyone come in your house if you’re not feeling well.”

And don’t be surprised if the company you’re booking a service with asks you a similar set of questions.

Wear face masks

While wearing face masks has been made into a political and ideologica­l fight (in the US), the science around wearing them remains the same, researcher­s say.

Masks work to prevent you from infecting someone, and if both you and the worker are wearing them, the chances of transmissi­on fall dramatical­ly.

Just as important is washing or sanitising hands before, during and after the delivery or service.

For that reason, keep a bottle of alcohol-based hand sanitiser (with alcohol content of 60% and above) by the entry to your home and ask the service person to use it before entering.

The risk of transmissi­on is low if you get closer than six feet (1.83m) to someone as they are coming into your home, but maintainin­g at least six feet (1.83m) of distance while they are working is key.

“It’s all about time and contact,” says Phil Santangelo, a professor of biomedical engineerin­g at Georgia Tech.

“Don’t stand there if they are working. The mask is not a panacea.

“If it’s in a bathroom, run an exhaust fan while they are working and maybe for a while after they leave.

“Open a window in the room where they are working.

“If there’s no PPE (personal protective equipment), I wouldn’t be anywhere near them.”

If a person has to work in your home for several hours on a repair, it’s still possible to be safe, says Emory University infectious disease post-doctoral fellow Maria Sundaram, even if that person works up a sweat while doing their job.

As the virus is contracted mainly through respirator­y transmissi­on, respirator­y droplets are of more concern than sweat, which is why face masks at all times are important, she says.

“The virus is replicatin­g in little sacs in your lungs called alveoli,” she explains.

“They (alveoli) look like an upside-down broccoli and the ends are shaped like little bulbs.

“They are a nice ground for viruses to grow in when you are sick.

“The liquid in sweat is coming from a completely different place.

“It’s not impossible to have transmissi­on that way, but it’s pretty unlikely.”

Shoes aren’t considered at high risk of transmissi­on, so there’s no need to ask a person to remove them unless that is the practice in your home, researcher­s say.

Gloves are of little help because most people don’t know how to wear them and remove them properly, Sundaram says.

“A lot of people find it challengin­g not to touch their face.

“And gloves are not antimicrob­ial surfaces, so coughing into a glove is like coughing into your hand.”

If someone in your home is at risk or immuno-compromise­d, keep them in an area of the home as far away from where the work is taking place as possible.

Also, if, for example, you or a loved one is elderly and concerned about transmissi­on, getting someone who is healthy and who has been observing stay-at-home protocols to greet the repair person and showing them where to work is an option, Sundaram says.

Cleaning every surface with soap and water, or a household cleaner such as Lysol or with an alcohol base, is a must once the work is done, all of the researcher­s say.

“There’s not a single thing that eliminates risk, but when you add layers of interventi­on, it greatly reduces risk,” Dr Lawrence says. – The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on/ Tribune News Service

 ?? — TnS ?? need your aircon serviced or TV repaired? It is fairly safe to invite a repairman into your house during this current pandemic as long as you take certain precaution­s.
— TnS need your aircon serviced or TV repaired? It is fairly safe to invite a repairman into your house during this current pandemic as long as you take certain precaution­s.
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