Quote:
Originally Posted by OrangeBlossomBaby
I believe the point of it being somewhere other than the theatre, lies in the fact that most people getting these treatment shots are being brought there by someone else. And that someone else is often the spouse or close friend. And that someone else needs something to do while they wait for the person to get their treatment. Or maybe they BOTH stop off in the square before getting in line, have a bite to eat inside the restaurant, maybe go shopping in any of the myriad of shops...
You're supposedly already presenting symptoms when you go for this treatment. The entire square becomes a petri dish, if a majority of people heading to the treatment center are stopping along the way, with symptoms, many rejecting masks, most of them not vaccinated.
At the Sharon, it's more isolated. There's no place to walk to, where you'll be in close proximity to crowds of other people. There are no stores there, no shops, no restaurants. There's little to do there IF you are going specifically to get the treatment, other than wait in line. That makes it safe for everyone else.
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The Sharon is isolated with no shops in the vicinity? I think you meant the Savannah Center which is constantly booked for activities where the Barnwood Theater is wide open.
What is the panic when daily most people are carrying the virus or interacting with people carrying the virus? Now there is close by treatment if people do acquire the disease.
So a family member takes their loved one to a facility in the middle of the Mohave desert for treatment, takes them home and then heads to Brownwood for a drink, dinner and some new clothes shopping. What’s the difference other than dragging their lived one a great distance for help?