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What's the risk level of going to the grocery store unmasked?

Grocery workers' union calls on stores to consider banning customers from coming inside
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We know more about the COVID-19 vaccines and the CDC has relaxed its masking guidelines in certain situations. So you might be wondering about the risks of getting sick in different situations.

We asked the experts, what’s the risk of getting COVID-19 from a trip to the grocery store?

Their take: The risk of contracting COVID-19 is low risk if you’re unmasked and fully vaccinated.

"The risk of going to the grocery store unmasked if you are unvaccinated would be higher. You could definitely have a chance of being exposed to somebody who was unknowingly contagious with COVID-19," Katie Cary, assistant vice president of infection prevention for HCA Continental Division, told Newsy. 

"It's also a factor in how much virus stays in the air from those who are unmasked. So a large chain store may have a much larger area with higher ceilings and more ventilation and truly just more air airflow in there. And 20 people in a large store is very different than 20 people in, say, a corner gas station that's very small and enclosed," said Dr. Kelly Cawcutt, associate medical director of infection control and epidemiology at Nebraska Medical Center.

"Walking by somebody who's infected — masks or not — it’s going to be low risk of transmission. Short of somebody directly coughing or sneezing right in your face, which is unlikely if you're on the move," said Dr. Joseph Khabbaza, a pulmonary critical care specialist at Cleveland Clinic. 

This story originally reported by Lindsey Theis on Newsy.com

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