If you have just received the coronavirus vaccine and your mind is boiling thinking about all the things you can do now that you have some protection against COVID-19, it is certainly understandable.
This has been an incredibly tough year and we have given up a lot. We were unable to go out with friends and family safely. We canceled weddings and parties. Travel plans were postponed and birthdays and holidays have been abnormally quiet. Of course, the punctures in the arm will cause some accumulated excitement to be able to enjoy all the things you have missed.
What can you do now? Well, that’s tricky. JoIn general, assessing the safety that an activity will have after getting vaccinated is not so dry. For the most part, very little has changed for vaccinated people.
Experts stress that it is a bit early to say that a pre-pandemic lifestyle can be resumed, especially considering that so many other people are not yet vaccinated. Herd immunity, when approximately 70% or more of the population is immune to the disease, is the primary goal of “normalcy”.
Traits are very effective against the virus that leads to hospitalization and death, which is excellent, but it’s not the only one that needs to be considered right now. Pginnovative research indicates that vaccines can reduce transmission, but more evidence needs to be collected.
All this means that there is no activity completely no risks at this time. However, with the right precautions, some of your favorite activities can be a bit safer according to experts. But there are other vital factors to keep in mind as we navigate the rest of the pandemic.
Local transmission and risk are important.
Before evaluating the safety of various post-vaccination activities, it is worth noting some important warnings.
One, you want to watch the community broadcast. If the cases are extremely high in your area, certain activities (such as eating indoors) will be much riskier compared to an area with minimal COVID-19 activity.
Second, you still have to assess your personal risk. We should all continue to wear masks and maintain physical distancing. If you have underlying health conditions that make you more vulnerable to COVID-19 or if you live with someone who does, it will be vital to continue to practice proven safety precautions. Keep this in mind 1 in 20 people he will not be protected even after being vaccinated.
Finally, emerging tests has shown us that even mild cases can cause devastating long-term symptoms that persist for months, potentially years. This happens to people who, on the other hand, are healthy and may even include people who had a totally asymptomatic infection. Thus, while the shot will protect most people from serious illness, there are many unanswered questions about what happens to people who receive a case of mild to moderate COVID-19 after the vaccine.

Is it safe to go to a friend’s or family member’s house?
Staying with other vaccinated people, just looking at this case on your own, is probably low risk.
“If you meet people you know who are vaccinated and have two doses, you probably shouldn’t wear a mask because even if, for some reason, you were an asymptomatic carrier and you gave it to yourself, you’re likely to wear very sick will be low, ”he said Krysia Lindan, professor of epidemiology and biostatistics at the University of California, San Francisco.
However, it gets complicated when you consider other people. It is important to consider the health of all involved, he said Chris Thompson, immunologist and associate professor of biology in the department of biology at Loyola University in Maryland.
For example, if everyone is really healthy, they may be less risky, but if someone has “underlying complications, why risk it?” Thompson said.
The same goes for spending time at home with friends or family who have not been vaccinated. Undoubtedly, this is riskier. If you are vaccinated, you are less likely to get the infection, but you still run the risk of transmitting it unknowingly to others.
You are risking. It’s less than it was before, but I wouldn’t be completely gentlemanly about it, “said Lindan.
Although a couple of small studies we’ve suggested vaccines reduce transmission, we don’t really know if you can still spread it, Thompson said.
Is it safe to go to restaurants?
Most infectious disease experts agree that eating indoors is still risky, as coronavirus is an airborne disease (i.e., it can hang in the air for hours and be inhaled). Although this risk of getting a disease decreases substantially after vaccination, there is still a world where you can go out to eat and pick up COVID-19.
In general, eating outdoors is much safer than eating indoors. (When we say outdoors, we mean completely outdoors, not a closed outdoor structure.) Being indoors, without a mask, and very close to others who are speaking and laughing, invites the opportunity for the virus to spread.
If you choose to eat indoors after receiving the vaccine, put on a mask when not actively eating and avoid crowded places, Lindan said. If you are older and at risk for serious COVID-19 disease, it is probably not a good idea to take off your mask and start eating inside strangers who may or may not be vaccinated.

Is it safe to travel?
Thompson said it is advisable to meet the same standards for unvaccinated people. The risk of disease will be lower, but yes you have to fly, wear a good mask and maybe even a face shield. “None of that really changes,” Thompson said.
We do not know how long immunity lasts after vaccination and, remember, not everyone who has been vaccinated will develop immunity. Airports and public toilets are considered to be more dangerous than airplanes, which have a large air leak.
Public transportation also runs the risk of being exposed to aerosolized viruses. The risk decreases after vaccination, especially for healthy people, but you could still spread the virus in these small spaces. It is not clear how often buses, subways and shared cars are sanitized traffic services they usually have poor ventilation, so masks are a must whether you have been vaccinated or not.
Is it safe to go to the gym or gym?
Lindan said that after getting vaccinated, “she could feel much safer” from cutting her hair, assuming staff and other clients also wore masks. Salons have been considered a high-risk environment, but combined with a good face mask, the vaccine helps reduce the risk (but, again, the risk is not zero).
Working in Gym it still worries disease experts as several outbreaks have occurred tracked in fitness studios.
“This is a place where people breathe heavily and potentially expire viruses, and so would you,” said Lindan, who strongly suggests wearing a mask and keeping your distance from others if you go to the gym.
Is it safe to go to the dentist?
The risk here is primarily for the dentist, not the patient, Lindan explained. If the dentist wears the proper protective equipment and there is good ventilation, the risk of transmission is low. “It’s probably okay to go and brush your teeth,” Lindan said.
The same goes for other medical consultations. Do not postpone important tests (some experts worry that the pandemic may cause more undetected health problems). Here’s a quick guide to what to do about certain doctor visits.
The hard truth is that scientists don’t really know exactly the safety of any of these activities for vaccinated people. That’s why the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is urging people to do so keep wearing masks until herd immunity is established and cases begin to decline drastically.
Getting the vaccine means you’ve done your part to stop the spread of COVID-19, but it doesn’t give you a free pass. However. If we all get shot when it’s our turn and hold on to the masks for a while longer, we’ll be able to eliminate COVID-19 relatively quickly.
Vaccination is “a big step forward in overcoming this,” Thompson said, “but we will go beyond that as a community, not as individuals.”
Experts are still learning about COVID-19. The information in this story is what was known or available from the publication, but orientations may change as scientists find out more about the virus. Check with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for the most up-to-date recommendations.
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