12
Tips for Staying Safe in Crowds
You're
seated in a venue with a thousand other people. Which do you
feel more threatened by: a fire, or a stranger sneezing on you?
Chances
are, most of us aren't very concerned about either—both
pose relatively minor health risks. But with a little more mindfulness
you can better protect your health and safety in the rare case
that something goes wrong at the concert hall or football game.
Follow these tips to keep yourself and your loved ones safe
and healthy while you're out living life to the fullest.
1. Keep your hands in your pockets.
Remember the golden equation for getting sick: Germ gets on
hands, hands touch face, germ enters body, you get sick. Where
there are crowds, there are germs— millions of them—on
every surface. Don't touch them and they won't make you sick.
2. Carry a bottle of hand sanitizer.
Use it after porta-potty visits, before eating, and anytime
you feel contaminated by the microbes of the masses.
3. Keep a set of earplugs handy.
If the event gets too loud, or you get stuck standing next to
the speakers, stick 'em in your ears.
4. Know how to get out. Look for
the emergency exit signs as you enter a large venue. It takes
only seconds—and those seconds could turn out to be the
best you ever spent.
5. Know the building's capacity.
Note how many people the building can safely hold (the figure
should be on a sign near the front door). If you feel that number
is exceeded, reduce it by one—yourself.
6. Find a meeting spot. Arrange
a place to meet your family or friends in case you get separated.
Actually, you should choose two places: one inside and one outside.
7. Keep to the wall. In the rare
event of a stampede, try to move sideways to the crowd until
you get to a wall. Then press yourself against it until the
crowd dissipates, or you find a better exit. It doesn't happen
often, but people do get trampled to death. If you've memorized
the emergency exits, you'll have better luck getting to one
that the rest of the crowd may not have noticed.
8. Pack a lunch. Forestall your
kids' pleas for junk food. If you can't avoid buying from food
carts, check out the vendor. Does the cart look clean? Does
he handle money and then touch the food? It's hard to tell just
by looking at it if food will make you sick, but you should
definitely avoid undercooked (pink) meats and meat that is not
hot when served.
9. Carry tissue. Remember to put
a wad of tissues in your purse or pocket. Now you have emergency
toilet paper if you have to hit those porta-potties.
10. Freeze your water. Put water
bottles in the freezer the night before the event. You'll save
money on overpriced bottled water at the event, and as the ice
melts, you'll have nice, cold water on hand to stay hydrated.
11. Dress in layers. You can shed
one of them if you get too hot. Of course, layers work the other
way too. If the temperature drops as the game goes into overtime,
you'll be prepared.
12. Leave before the curtain call.
You'll beat the crowd, get out of the parking garage more quickly,
and avoid ruining your lovely time out with an evening-ending
bout of blood-pressure-raising stress.
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