The second in our ‘creative quarantining’ resource round-ups brings together ideas on how you can cook together (apart) and learn some useful new skills!
Category: Covid-19
Social Distancing = Podcast Listening, It’s Complicated with Yes Theory
In the third episode of It’s Complicated Series Three, Tanya Goodin chats to Thomas Brag, co-founder of Yes Theory about his life and work online.
Addiction Is ‘A Disease Of Isolation’ — So Pandemic Puts Recovery At Risk
“We consider addiction a disease of isolation…Now we’re isolating all these people and expecting them to pick up the phone, get online, that sort of thing — and it may not work out as well.”
Creative Quarantining: #1 Making Music
Creative Quarantining: our round-up of real-world activities you can find online but then do together. #1 Here’s some suggestions on how you can make music.
4 Tips for Healthy Screen Use Working From Home
Everyone’s struggling to maintain digital wellbeing working from home, especially during the coronavirus pandemic. Here are four tips to help.
When Purell is Contraband, How Do You Contain Coronavirus?
Handwashing and sanitizers may make people on the outside safer. But in prison it can be impossible to follow public health advice.
Screens in the Time of Covid-19
As we practice social distancing over the next months we need to create a balance. Screens and Covid-19 will be our constants and we need to manage both.
As The Coronavirus Spreads, Americans Lose Ground Against Other Health Threats
As the world struggles to control COVID-19, U.S. health officials are refighting battles they thought they had won, such as halting measles outbreaks, reducing deaths from heart disease and protecting young people from tobacco.
Smartphones and Coronavirus
We’ve been advised to wash our hands more frequently in the current coronavirus outbreak, should we be looking at keeping our smartphones cleaner too?
What really works to keep coronavirus away? 4 questions answered by a public health professional
While hand-washing is preferred, hand sanitizers with at least a 60% alcohol concentration can be an effective alternative to always using soap and water, but only if your hands are not visibly soiled.