Hartford Courant

World Series will have spectators in the stadium

No temperatur­e checks will be offered as fans enter ballpark

- By Los Angeles Times

When fans return to the ballpark for the World Series and National League Championsh­ip Series at Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas, they will not be subject to a temperatur­e check.

Such screenings have become common nationwide, in attempts to keep people infected with the coronaviru­s from entering facilities where they might infect others. In its health and safety protocols, Major League Baseball requires temperatur­e checks for players, coaches, team staffers, media members and stadium cleaning crews. The latter two groups are kept away from players; the MLB announceme­nt of ticket sales said no seats would be available “within 20 feet of where a player can be located on the field, in the dugouts or in the bullpen.”

As the host Texas Rangers put tickets on public sale Tuesday for the World Series and NLCS, they noted that fans could buy in groups of only four, would be seated at least 6 feet from other groups, and would have to wear masks when not eating or drinking. The Rangers limited sales to 11,500 tickets per game; the new stadium seats 40,300.

However, MLBandtheR­angers said there would be no temperatur­e checks. The Rangers said “public health authoritie­s recommend self-screening before you enter public places,” and MLB said fans exhibiting symptoms could be denied entry.

“After reviewing the available technology and consulting with local public health authoritie­s and outside infectious disease experts, MLB and the Rangers made a collective decision not to take the temperatur­es of fans entering the ballpark,” the league said in a statement. “This decision was based on a number of factors, including the reliabilit­y of available technology and the close contact that temperatur­e checks would require.”

The NFL’s Dallas Cowboys play in a stadium across the parking lot from the Rangers’ ballpark. The Cowboys do not check temperatur­es. They have welcomed more than 20,000 fans to each of their two home games so far this season.

The scientific community has debated the value of temperatur­e checks. Some people infected with COVID-19 show no symptoms, and some that do show symptoms do not have a fever. And, while detection of a fever could keep an infected person out of a venue, it would not necessaril­y mean the fever was caused by COVID-19.

In an article on the health website Stat, researcher­s suggested that a scratch-andsniff test might be more valuable than a temperatur­e check in detecting COVID-19. Loss of smell “produces a clearer signal and may therefore be a better Covid-catching net than fever,” author Sharon Begley wrote in reviewing a Mayo Clinic study.

James Hamblin, a lecturer at the Yale School of Public Health, wrote in the Atlantic that largescale fever screenings may do more to provide a crowd with the appearance of reassuranc­e than to detect the virus.

“As logical as mass temperatur­e checks may seem,” he wrote, “the practice hasn’t clearly been shown to help contain the coronaviru­s.”

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