From Yahoo:
“Temp checks, digital menus
and 'touchless' mustard: The maddening persistence of 'hygiene theater'”
At an ice cream shop in
Rockville, Md., gloved servers scoop the frozen treat into cups, but a sign
taped to the front window says "No cones: Covid." At McDonald's
outlets along I-95 in Virginia, yellow police-style tape cordons off self-serve
beverage stations. And at Nationals Park, baseball fans use a QR code and
digital menu rather than ordering directly from the person who hands them their
hot dog.
None of these precautions provide
meaningful protection against the spread of the coronavirus, safety experts
say. Instead, they are examples of what critics call "hygiene
theater," the deployment of symbolic tactics that do little to prevent the
spread of the coronavirus but may make some anxious consumers feel safer. (The term
is widely credited to Atlantic writer Derek Thompson, who catalogued
ineffective but showy anti-covid tactics last summer.)
As the covid death rate plummets
in America and the number of vaccinations soars, the persistence of these
practices is seriously frustrating folks who argue that their vaccinated status
should free them from such annoying restrictions. "We really should be
scaling back on these precautions, especially on the steroidally boosted
cleaning of surfaces," said Lindsey Leininger, a Dartmouth College
business professor who specializes in public health and runs a coronavirus
information site called Dear Pandemic. "I look at all these unnecessary
restrictions that degrade the customer experience and, as a vaccinated person,
I'm like, 'Why?' "
Months after it became clear that
surface contact is not a significant transmitter of the virus, Danny Pearlstein
wonders why cleaning crews are still disinfecting New York City subway cars -
and whether the transit system might provide better service if it weren't
spending so much on scientifically invalid measures. "They're
power-washing the outside of cars as if New Yorkers were going around licking
the exterior of subway cars," said Pearlstein, policy director of the
Riders Alliance, which represents New York transit users. "It's hygiene
theater, and it has no place in the public discussion about covid now." "After all the disinformation of the
Trump years, we really need our leaders to level with us," he said.
Many such precautions were first
adopted early last year, when public health officials suspected the virus might
linger on surfaces and spread via touch. But closer study determined that the
risk of infection from doorknobs, buttons and the like was extremely low. In
April, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said that "contact
with a contaminated surface has less than a 1 in 10,000 chance of causing an
infection" - a smidgen higher than a person's lifetime chance of being
struck by lightning. Defenders of hygiene theater argue that some restrictions
that seem nonsensical or outdated may nonetheless be useful in helping people
dive back into society. Leininger said she isn't ready to "shame
businesses for hygiene theater because I have so much empathy for employers.
Sometimes the way we mitigate risk is through emotions."
After the 9/11 attacks, Americans
became accustomed to seeing security measures that experts said could do little
to deter terrorism but might make people feel safer. Two decades later, lobby
attendants in many office buildings still insist on seeing an ID card, any ID
card, before waving a visitor along. Airline passengers still approach security
checks where bins overflow with confiscated toothpaste tubes and cosmetics
containers.
Amid such enduring examples of
what critics dubbed "security theater," many people wonder if scenes
from hygiene theater also will become permanent fixtures of public life. The
danger of hanging on to lockdown-era practices is that "if you're spending
X million dollars on cleaning, where's that coming from and what's not being
done?" Leininger said. "We need to talk about how we're going to dial
back from where we are."
When indoor concerts resumed last
month at Washington's Kennedy Center, patrons were greeted by an array of
anti-covid precautions, including a temperature check, frequent reminders to
remain masked at all times and announcements that there would be no printed
program describing the evening's offerings. Nearly 160 miles away at the
American Shakespeare Center in Staunton, Va., shows have resumed with no more
temperature probes, no more mid-show disinfectants, and tentative plans to
revive printed programs and scrap mask mandates for the fall season. "Romeo
really can't kiss Juliet from six feet away," said Kelly Burdick, who
helped develop the theater's covid guidelines. "There are protocols we had
in place last spring that we wouldn't have today because the scientists know
more about how the virus is transmitted." The Staunton theater consulted
with a local infectious-disease expert (who happened also to be a Shakespeare
buff) and guided the theater away from some precautions that no longer made
scientific sense. For example, Anthony Fauci, the top infectious-disease expert
in the Biden and Trump administrations, has called temperature checks
"notoriously inaccurate," and the National Restaurant Association
recommends against their use.
Following the CDC's statement
that surfaces are not a significant vector for the coronavirus, the theater is
focusing on precautions that might ease customers' anxiety about being part of
an audience. Some patrons still want to wear masks for fear of bringing the
virus home to their children, Burdick said, though science suggests that is a
relatively small risk for those who have been vaccinated. This fall, the
theater is considering letting vaccinated patrons make their own choice about
masks, which would allow food and beverage service to resume. "We want to
go with straight science, but we have to recognize that people are in different
places," Burdick said. Similarly,
the Kennedy Center may resume printing programs sometime in the coming season
and will return to accepting cash at concession stands, said Ellery Brown, the
center's senior vice president for operations. "We want to acknowledge the
traditionalists who want things the old way," he said. For now, however,
the Kennedy Center is sticking with temperature checks, Brown said, conceding
that "some of it is psychology." "If somebody's spent a lot of money for a
ticket, this helps us notify people that we care about them."
Last year, worldwide sales of
surface disinfectants soared by more than 30%. CDC official Vincent Hill now
says the aggressive disinfecting that many businesses still conduct may produce
a "false sense of security" and amount to hygiene theater. CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said this
spring that disinfection is only recommended in indoor settings such as schools
and homes when "there has been a suspected or confirmed case of covid-19
within the last 24 hours." Still, the connection between surfaces and
infection lingers in the public consciousness and many public places continue
to fuel that notion. "Earlier in the pandemic, it was good to see barriers
and aggressive cleaning," said Brad Engle, a corporate reputation
consultant and Washington Nationals fan who, like many who visited Nationals
Park, was stymied by the "touchless condiment" dispensers that showed
up this season. "What they're doing now is making people feel less
comfortable." Some fanstook to Twitter to lament the loss of ketchup pumps
and open bins of onions and relish at the condiment tables. Others welcomed the
new machines, even if the globs they delivered at the wave of a hand sometimes
slathered hot dogs with ruinous puddles rather than delicate drizzles of
mustard. "I'm glad we are at the point I can complain about something
other than covid, but the @Nationals condiment situation is criminal,"
Engle wrote in a tweet. In an interview, he said the Nats created longer queues
and tighter crowds of people by prohibiting cash transactions, requiring use of
QR codes to order at some concession lines and adopting touchless technology
that confused many customers. "I understand that the Nationals needed to
take precautions," said Frank Miller, a longtime season ticket holder,
"but I feel they missed the mark." Miller said the team's no-bags
policy had no apparent connection to covid safety, the touchless dispensers
created "a lot of confusion," and the no-cash concessions
"created more big gatherings" of fans. Nats spokeswoman Jennifer
Mastin Giglio said some safety rules will change midseason. The team now allows
vaccinated fans to go maskless. Last week, the Nats lifted the ban on small
bags and, after The Washington Post passed along fans' complaints about
touchless condiment dispensers, got rid of those machines. "Guidance
shifts and changes pretty regularly as [health officials] learn more and
more," Giglio said. "As a result, we have shifted, too." "It can be tough to communicate broad,
sweeping changes mid-homestand - tough on staff who have to implement the
changes and enforce them, and tough on our fans who need to know what to expect
when they arrive," she said.
Americans craving clear,
consistent rules are in for some disappointment in the coming months.
Businesses are adding, subtracting and altering restrictions in every
direction. Southwest Airlines announced it would resume serving alcoholic
drinks on some flights, then scrapped that plan - a response to widespread
reports of unruly passenger behavior across the industry. Major hotel chains
say they're sticking with check-ins via smartphone and enhanced cleaning
regimens. But perhaps tellingly, they say their policies are evolving according
to the science - and customer feedback. Touchless
check-in screens have been added at many airports, but confusion over how to
scan QR codes and use finger-hovering screens to check in or get baggage tags
has resulted in more crowding - the opposite of the social distancing that the
new technologies were meant to enhance.
Many covid-related restrictions
were intended from the start not just to inhibit spread of the virus, but to
ease consumers' anxieties and to save money, especially in industries where
revenue was crushed by the pandemic. When New York City shut down its famously
24/7 subways during the small hours of the night, the announced reason was to
let crews conduct rigorous cleaning of all surfaces. Gov. Andrew Cuomo, D,
called the move vital to protecting the safety of passengers and workers. But
when round-the-clock service resumed last month, the transit authority said it
had figured out how to keep the deep cleaning regimen going even as the trains
rolled. Many transit systems, such as San Francisco's Bay Area Rapid Transit
(BART), are keeping or even adding cleaning workers to telegraph to riders that
it's safe to come back. BART spent a year using hospital-grade disinfectant in
stations and spraying disinfectant mist onto its train cars. Last month, the
system announced it would return to "traditional cleaning methods,"
dropping the daily fogging because "covid-19 is primarily transmitted
through the air" - yet BART said it was nonetheless hiring dozens more
cleaners.
Restaurants are picking and
choosing from a vast menu of covid caution procedures. In many eateries, food
menus that went all-digital early in the pandemic have stayed that way, despite
guidance from the National Restaurant Association that because infection from
surfaces is unlikely, "restaurants can consider going back to regular
print menus, table condiments, etc." "We think we're on the other
side of covid," said the association's senior vice president for science
and industry, Larry Lynch. He never liked temperature checks ("It was
confrontational and it wasn't always accurate"), is happy to see the
return of paper menus and regular tableware, and is ready for buffets to
reopen, though some are shifting toward cafeteria-style service rather than
letting diners dig into food trays themselves. "Everything restaurants
were doing was so customers could see they were doing everything they
could," Lynch said. "The message was, 'Hey, we care about you.' It's
not about theater but about wanting customers to feel comfortable about going
out. Going forward, it won't have to be as showy." As customers get more
comfortable, plexiglass barriers will come down and so will servers' masks.
"People want to see servers' faces," Lynch said.
^ It was clear a few months into
the Pandemic that the majority of these “precautions” didn’t really protect
anyone from Covid yet they were kept in-place to give people the false sense of
security. I have long said the same about many of the TSA, airline and airport
terrorism security procedures in-place for 20 years now. You can easily see
that how useless many of those are from all the videos recently of passengers themselves
having to over-take the crazies mid-air who try to storm the cock-pit. Usually
the flight attendants (whose sole job is to protect us in the air) can not or
will not protect us so in the end ordinary passengers are forced to. While
these Covid precautions aren’t life or death (they are simply annoying and don’t
make sense) they still fit the same category of giving people a false sense of
security. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/temp-checks-digital-menus-touchless-124057363.html
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