The Guardian

'Pause, reflect and stay home': how to look after yourself and others in self-isolation

Seven days? Fourteen days? Can you go for a walk? What about your children? Here is a guide to staying safe and cheerful if you can’t leave the houseCoronavirus – latest updatesSee all our coronavirus coverage

If you are not already self-isolating, or considering it, there is a high chance you will be in the coming months. The government’s advice is that people who live alone and have a fever or a continuous cough should be completely isolated for seven days, while 14 days of “whole household isolation” is recommended where anyone has those symptoms. This means not even going out for a walk or opening the door to receive a delivery directly.

This extreme state is ringed by the equally novel and perhaps more poorly understood concept of “social distancing”. At its most basic, this means trying to drastically reduce the amount of contact you have with other people, especially if you are 70 or older. If your average day features 1,000 interactions – public transport, the office, the shops, the pub, the cinema – then reducing that to 500 interactions will have a material effect on your chances of contracting the coronavirus and on the speed of transmission overall.

It sounds simple, but both concepts throw up multiple practical follow-up questions – to which the answers are often unclear. Prof Tom Jefferson, a British epidemiologist based in Rome with the medical research group Cochrane, is an expert in . He says that we may have to tolerate this lack of clarity. “There is no certainty in science,”

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Guardian

The Guardian8 min read
PinkPantheress: ‘I Don’t Think I’m Very Brandable. I Dress Weird. I’m Shy’
PinkPantheress no longer cares what people think of her. When she released her lo-fi breakout tracks Break it Off and Pain on TikTok in early 2021, aged just 19, she did so anonymously, partly out of fear of being judged. Now, almost three years late
The Guardian4 min read
The Golden Bachelor’s Older Singletons Have Saved A Franchise
Strange as it may sound, one of the hottest shows on TV this fall has been … an old dating series now catering, for once, to senior citizens. That would be The Golden Bachelor, a new spin-off of America’s pre-eminent dating series in which a 72-year-
The Guardian4 min read
Lawn And Order: The Evergreen Appeal Of Grass-cutting In Video Games
Jessica used to come for tea on Tuesdays, and all she wanted to do was cut grass. Every week, we’d click The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker’s miniature disc into my GameCube and she’d ready her sword. Because she was a couple of years younger than m

Related Books & Audiobooks