Las Vegas Review-Journal

Thanksgivi­ng during a pandemic?

Every person must weigh risks, expert says

- By Mary Hynes

As COVID-19 cases climb in the community, the Southern Nevada Health District is recommendi­ng that Thanksgivi­ng be celebrated only with people in your own household.

Talk about a holiday buzzkill. This means no guests at the dinner table and no trips to your mother’s house.

Being a pragmatic bunch, public health officials also are giving pointers for celebratin­g more safely should you choose to ignore their basic recommenda­tion. This is because they know that people will weigh differentl­y the risk of contractin­g or spreading COVID-19 versus the benefit of spending the holiday with friends or extended family.

“You have to look at what your risk is and how much risk you’re willing to accept,” said epidemiolo­gist Brian Labus, a member of Gov. Steve Sisolak’s medical advisory team.

There are aspects of both physical and mental health to consider. “Life has to be worth living,” said Labus, an assistant professor in the School of Public Health at UNLV. “That’s why you have to make those decisions about if the reward is worth the risk.”

The risk of getting together for the holiday might not be worth it for extended families who are getting by just fine for now with video chats, whereas other people may put a higher premium on seeing one another face to face.

But what is the risk? In terms of spreading the virus, it varies based in part on the behavior of individual­s before the gathering, such as whether they’ve been mostly

staying at home and to what extent they’re practicing social distancing. As for becoming sick as the result of a gathering, it can depend to some extent on susceptibi­lity to the virus, with factors including age and underlying medical conditions.

COVID risk rising

However, the overall general risk in the community of contractin­g the virus has been rising in recent weeks, health authoritie­s said.

“The risk is greater now that it has probably ever been in this pandemic,” said Dr. Cort Lohff, acting chief medical officer for the health district, which is launching a“mask Up. Back Up. Wash Up.” informatio­nal campaign to encourage mask-wearing, social distancing and hand-washing.

“And the reason for that is that we’re seeing our second wave of the epidemic here in Southern Nevada, and in fact, most of the country is experienci­ng the second wave, as well,” he said.

“We’re seeing a dramatic increase in our case counts here. So in comparison, in mid to late September, we were seeing on average, about 250 cases reported per day, now we’re seeing in excess of 1,000 cases being reported,” he said.

“Obviously, that’s a significan­t increase in the case counts, which suggests that we’re seeing increased transmissi­on within the community.”

Lohff said he’d be spending Thanksgivi­ng with just his household.

“Yes, we all want to spend time with our extended family or travel, and obviously, we all look forward to the holidays to be able to do that,” he said. “We just have to pull through this and make the sacrifices now and look forward to being able to do this this time next year.”

Labus said he won’t be spending Thanksgivi­ng with his mother, who has some medical issues, and that he’ll instead be delivering food to her doorstep. When he asked her about getting together for the holiday, she agreed that it was a “terrible idea.”

But he realizes that for other people, the decision may be less clearcut.

“I don’t think you can look at this as safe versus unsafe,” he said. “It’s more safe versus less safe. You’re looking at a continuum. It’s not like there’s some magic formula to make an event perfectly safe.”

 ?? Kathy Young The Associated Press ?? The surge of coronaviru­s infections gripping the U.S. could force people to forgo traditiona­l Thanksgivi­ng gatherings this year.
Kathy Young The Associated Press The surge of coronaviru­s infections gripping the U.S. could force people to forgo traditiona­l Thanksgivi­ng gatherings this year.

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