The Pilot News

Safe trickor-treating

How families are keeping Halloween from turning into a COVID nightmare

- By Priscilla Blossom

DENVER— For Laura Stoutingbu­rg and her family, Halloween has always been a monthlong celebratio­n of corn mazes, pumpkin patches and, of course, trick-or-treating in their suburban Denver neighborho­od.

However, the COVID-19 pandemic has forced the mother of two to change their plans.

“Traditiona­l trick-or-treating house to house does not feel like a smart choice to me this year,” Stoutingbu­rg said.

Families across the nation are haunted by the same dilemma: How can they safely keep the pandemic from overshadow­ing Halloween? Can families trick-or-treat and go to haunted houses, or should they opt for lower-risk activities at home?

Health experts say families should err on the side of caution when it comes to trick-or-treating and other traditiona­l fall activities. Much depends on each family’s comfort with taking risks and ensuring they adhere to safety standards and common sense, they said. Masks should be worn by all, even if not part of a costume.

“My kids love going to the farm … to go pumpkin-picking, applepicki­ng and all those things we do in the fall,” said Dr. Aaron Milstone, a professor of pediatrics and an associate epidemiolo­gist at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. But, he added, “if you show up at the pumpkin patch and it’s packed with people, that’s not the right time for you to be there.”

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently released Halloween guidelines that warn against high-risk activities like traditiona­l trick-or-treating, haunted houses and costume parties, as well as hay and tractor rides, among other things. The federal agency is also clear on the need for social distancing, mask-wearing and hand-washing to continue.

Many parents are coming up with creative alternativ­es for Halloween night. For Stoutingbu­rg, 30, that

means hosting a small sleepover with relatives that features pumpkincar­ving, cupcake-decorating and a scavenger hunt.

Jody Allard and her family also will forgo their usual tricks and treats. Allard, 42, lives in Seattle and has a rare genetic disease, putting her at higher risk for COVID-19. The mother of seven said her family will make new traditions this year.

“We’re going to make a bunch of different fun foods from the Halloween shows they like to watch on the Food Network, and we’re going to watch kid-friendly Halloween movies,” Allard said.

In Lancaster, Pennsylvan­ia, 44-year-old writer Jamie Beth Cohen’s daughter came up with the idea that she and her brother dress up in costumes and trick-or-treat inside their own home, with their parents behind the doors of various rooms, waiting with candy.

“She’s excited to wear a costume without a jacket and get lots of the kind of candy she likes,” Cohen said.

Maya Brown-zimmerman and her family of six never miss out on trickor-treating in Cleveland. But they will this year, with Brown-zimmerman, 35, at higher risk for COVID-19 because of multiple lung diseases.

Instead, her family will use their costumemon­ey on new Halloween decor, and her four kids, ages 3 to 11, will search for candy at home.

“I’ll hide eggs of candy in the front yard for my little kids,” she said. “After they go to bed, the older kids will have a hunt for eggs in the dark in our backyard with flashlight­s.”

For families still hoping to trickor-treat this year, though, what can be done to stay as safe as possible?

The Harvard Global Health Institute created a website to help parents assess their risk level for Halloween activities with a color-coded map of county COVID data. It shows which counties are “lower-risk” zones for COVID (green and yellow), where parents might feel more comfortabl­e allowing their children to trickor-treat, and which are higher-risk areas (orange and red), where online parties and very small gatherings are recommende­d instead.

Milstone said families should think less in terms of green versus red zones and more in terms of staying safe no matter what, especially considerin­g asymptomat­ic carriers.

“Rather than people getting a false sense of security that ‘My area is a low-risk area, so I’m just gonna go and do whatever,’ I would say ideally everyone practices the same safe things,” he said.

Dr. Heather Isaacson, a pediatrici­an with Uchealth in Longmont, Colorado, said masks must be worn by all and has a simple suggestion for the reluctant: “Decorate those masks and incorporat­e them into the costumes.”

People who hand out candy also should wear masks, added Dr. Alok Patel, a pediatrici­an and co-host of the “Nova” and PBS Digital Studios show “Parentalog­ic.” And it’s a good idea to maintain as much distance as possible.

As for the candy itself, Milstone isn’t as concerned about wrappers as about hand-washing. The primary message is, “Don’t let your kid eat candy with dirty hands,” he said. That means no eating candy until they’re able to get home to wash properly.

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 ??  ?? The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently released Halloween guidelines that warn against high-risk activities like traditiona­l trick-or-treating, haunted houses and costume parties, as well as hay and tractor rides, among other things. The federal agency is also clear on the need for social distancing, mask-wearing and hand-washing to continue.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently released Halloween guidelines that warn against high-risk activities like traditiona­l trick-or-treating, haunted houses and costume parties, as well as hay and tractor rides, among other things. The federal agency is also clear on the need for social distancing, mask-wearing and hand-washing to continue.

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