Categories
Pandemic

Lockstalgia

Lockstalgia is a portmanteau of lockdown and nostalgia and it means a fondness for the time when the world was in lockdown. Granted, not many will look back fondly on these memories, but some will. If you are now required to go back to the office full time, you might reminisce about the time you could work remotely in your pajamas or take the dog for a walk during lockdown. You might have started new hobbies during this period that you stopped doing once pandemic restrictions lifted and life went slowly back to normal.

The Collins Dictionary’s entry for lockstalgia is defined as “nostalgia for a time when the country was in lockdown, or in a more extreme form of lockdown.”

Lockstalgia also appears in the Cambridge Dictionary blog as one of several new words that entered the vocabulary in 2020:

a feeling of nostalgia for the lockdown period of the covid-19 pandemic.

Above all, just as you may have entered lockdown with purpose, exit it with purpose too. If you do not, then you may start having feelings of “lockstalgia”, and start regretting that you did not keep doing the things that you not only found more efficient but preferred and actually enjoyed.

Mark Pittaccio, a business consultant and behavioral economist for Quilter Financial Planning has some suggestions on how to avoid feelings of lockstalgia:

[the] things we did during lockdown happened in a set of very strange circumstances, and were partly driven by survival instincts. As we move forward, we need to consider how we adopt new things as the traditional rhythms of life resume…Above all, just as you may have entered lockdown with purpose, exit it with purpose too…If you do not, then you may start having feelings of ‘lockstalgia’, and start regretting that you did not keep doing the things that you not only found more efficient but preferred and actually enjoyed.

Citywire

In writing for the Daily News one author sums up their reflections of the pandemic, restrictions and lockdown: “To look on the bright side, as life begins to embrace the ‘new normal’ in our homes, cities and communities, albeit the imaginary horrors experienced by those like me, let’s store all the experiences of the past few months in a secure part of our minds for a time when we may look fondly upon the months of lockdown and tell our grandchildren and great grandchildren stories of how ‘My boss tested posi for the ’Rona so I was in iso. Popped down to the supermarket for some sanny, but it was all Magpie’d.’ Let’s call these memories, lockstalgia” (Dissanayake).

courtesy of Mike Sassi

Social Media Trends as of October 22, 2022

Facebook #lockstalgia: people are posting about this.

Sources:

Dissanayake, Aditha. “Lockstalgia.” DailyNews. October 5, 2020. URL: http://www.dailynews.lk/2020/10/05/tc/230489/lockstalgia.

“Lockstalgia.” Cambridge Dictionary. September 7, 2020. URL: https://dictionaryblog.cambridge.org/2020/09/07/new-words-7-september-2020/.

Melony. “Lockstalgia.” Collins Dictionary. July 8, 2020. URL: https://www.collinsdictionary.com/submission/22592/lockstalgia.

Pittaccio, Mark. “How to avoid ‘lockstalgia’ as pandemic restrictions end.” Citywire.com. July 2, 2020. URL: https://citywire.com/new-model-adviser/news/how-to-avoid-lockstalgia-as-pandemic-restrictions-end/a1374637.

Sassi, Mike. “Lockstalgia” tweet. Twitter. May 14, 2020. URL: https://mobile.twitter.com/MikeSassi/status/1260932428098461696.

Categories
Pandemic Pandemic Relationships

Corona baby

When couples are isolated indoors during lockdown and didn’t have much else to do, it seems logical they would be having more sex and more often that not this resulted in more babies being born. It’s hard work taking care of a newborn baby but imagine how difficult it was becoming a parent during the pandemic, coping with shortages of toilet paper and formula, not to mention the financial cost of taking care of a baby when millions of jobs were lost during lockdown.

The cohort of babies born during the global pandemic have come to be known as “corona babies.” The term started to appear in online articles and social media posts around March 2020 and the term appears in the Urban Dictionary:

A baby created as a result of the 2020 coronavirus outbreak, where people isolated together indoors with nothing better to do than “work from home” and hoard toilet paper.

“Did you know they just had a corona baby?”

“Being shut in together for 2 months will do that”

“At least the corona baby has a lifetime supply of TP

The possibility of a Covid baby boom was discussed in a tweet posted by Starcasm on March 16, 2020.

Back in 2020 The List published a YouTube video asking viewers the question “will the coronavirus lead to a baby boom?”

More than two years after lockdown we have the answer to this question. An article published for the Daily Caller on May 24, 2022 acknowledged there had been an increase in the birth rate caused by the pandemic:

The U.S. birthrate saw a 1% increase over the course of 2021 with 3.66 million babies being born throughout the year, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) National Center for Health Statistics. All age groups of women over 25 contributed to the jump in birthrates, with some experts suggesting that a lengthening COVID-19 pandemic might have contributed to the bump, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Bryan Babb
courtesy of Mercenary_hero

Social Media Trends as of October 9, 2022

Facebook #coronababy: 11,000 people are posting about this
Instagram #coronababy: 43,396 posts
TikTok #coronababy: 29,900,000 views
YouTube #coronababy: 100 videos and channels

Google Trends: “corona baby” peaked during the week of March 15th 2020 which coincided with lockdown.

corona baby search term

Sources:

Babb, Bryan. “CORONA-BABIES: US Birth Rate Increases For The First Time In Seven Years.” DailyCaller.com. May 24, 2022. URL: https://dailycaller.com/2022/05/24/us-birth-rate-increase-covid-pandemic/.

dots4dickn. “Corona baby.” Urban Dictionary. March 14, 2020. URL: https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Corona%20baby.

Mercenary_hero. “Covid babies on the way…” meme. MemeDroid.com. June 14, 2021. URL: https://www.memedroid.com/memes/detail/3380395/Covid-babies-on-the-way.

Starcasm. “9 months from now there are going to be a LOT of babies being born…” Twitter. March 16, 2020. URL: https://twitter.com/starcasm/status/1239636704392249347.

The List channel. “Will The Coronavirus Lead To A Baby Boom?” YouTube. 2020. URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-vuIsV2XSXg.

Categories
Pandemic Pandemic Relationships

Corona zoned

Looking for love during a global pandemic can be tricky. It’s difficult to meet someone during periods of lockdown so many people used dating apps and kept in touch using zoom or chat. If you get to the stage where you want to meet up IRL then prepare to be corona zoned. This is where your partner is afraid to come over and get intimate in case they catch the ‘Rona and if you’re not vaccinated your relationship may end abruptly. This is probably just a notch up from being friend zoned.

The Urban Dictionary has a crude definition for corona zoned:

The new cockblock of 2020 due to the quarantine situation during the coronavirus outbreak. When a girl you trying to have sex with won’t meet with you purely out of fear that she might get infected with the virus.

flame99fromthablocc

An article published for the Huff Post explains it more eloquently: “When someone ― very understandably! ― doesn’t want to come to your place to hook up out of fear of catching or spreading the virus, you’ve been corona-zoned” (Wong).

Social Media Trends as of October 8, 2022

Facebook #coronazoned: people are posting about this.

Sources:

flame99fromthablocc. “Corona zoned.” Urban Dictionary. March 18, 2020. URL: https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=corona%20zoned.

Wong, Brittany. “13 New Dating Terms We Have COVID-19 To Thank For.” Huff Post. October 27, 2020. URL: https://www.huffpost.com/entry/new-dating-terms-covid-pandemic_l_5f90a2b7c5b695a32fb005f0.

Categories
Pandemic Pandemic Relationships

Corona-cuffing

What comes before Lockdown engagement? Corona-cuffing. This dating term appeared around March 2020 and refers to the “act of pressing fast forward on dating and going straight to the serious relationship stage, due to the challenging experience of being a single person during lockdown” (Glamour). Fear of missing out, maybe fear of dying alone is a strong motivator during a global pandemic when people are seeing their loved ones getting sick and possibly dying from Covid-19.

Single people have been particularly challenged by Covid restrictions, lockdown and quarantine. For many, it has made their loneliness more difficult to live with. An article published for Glamour on September 24, 2020 featured an interview with Rebecca, a 32 year old from London who “corona-cuffed” out of loneliness:

“I started talking to a guy on Hinge just before lockdown and quite literally locked him down for quarantine. It has totally enhanced my lockdown experience having someone to talk to every day and we even went on a post-quarantine holiday together, but I know he’s not The One. I was just desperate to lock someone down since I couldn’t date IRL – but things are already starting to go south as we adjust to ‘normal’ again. But, I don’t want to call things off because I’m so scared I won’t find anyone before the next lockdown.

Glamour

The Redonline magazine featured an interview with Hinge’s Director of Relationship Science, Logan Ury, who said: “Cuffing season is a period of time after the fun summer of love and being single, before the cold, lonely months of winter when people really want to get into a relationship.” There are downsides to rushing into relationships with people you hardly know especially when commitments are made too quickly. Ury continues that “Hinge are now seeing a lot more intentional daters on the app, who have used their time alone during lockdown to re-assess their dating habits” (Ilston).

Check out the informational video below as Iman Hariri-Kia, Bustle’s relationship editor, discuss the advantages and risks of settling down with a short term partner during a pandemic.

courtesy of dangremonster

Social Media Trends as of October 2, 2022

Facebook #coronacuffing: people are posting about this
Instagram #coronacuffing: 23 posts

Google Trends: surprisingly “corona-cuffing” did not get picked up by the Google search engine. This may change in the future.

Sources:

Bustle channel. “Does Covid Cancel Cuffing Season?” YouTube. December 24, 2020. URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QEz9RKowJIc.

dangremonster. “love in the time of corona” meme. Reddit. 2020. URL: https://www.reddit.com/r/CoronavirusMemes/comments/fd2d0g/love_in_the_time_of_corona/.

“The Corona-cuff.” Glamour. September 24, 2020. URL: https://www.glamour.co.za/wellness/corona-cuffing-is-the-new-lockdown-dating-trend-thats-seeing-everyone-coupling-up-because-of-the-10pm-curfews-and-ban-on-casual-sex-rules-aa48c074-deee-46cf-aaf6-98d53886aed6.

Ilston, Sarah. “The new dating trend that’s doubled in popularity since lockdown.” Redonline. 30 October 2020. URL: https://www.redonline.co.uk/wellbeing/sex-relationships/a34492908/covid-cuffing-dating-trend/.

Categories
Pandemic Pandemic Relationships

Faucied

The dating world has seen new terms added during the Coronavirus pandemic, from Turbo Relationship to Lockdown Engagement. In 2020 the dating website Plenty of Fish coined the term “faucied” named after Dr. Anthony Fauci who serves as the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) and as Chief Medical Advisor to the President. Dr. Fauci has become something of a household name due to his expertise on coronavirus and for his regular appearances on TV.

Dr. Fauci has been a strong advocate for wearing masks during the pandemic and it is because of this that the term “faucied” came into being. Bruce Lee, a writer for Forbes magazine explains why:

When you “Fauci” someone, you don’t date that person because he or she is not taking Covid-19 and COvid-19 precautions seriously enough. For example, you may be Fauci-ing him because he claimed that the Covid-19 coronavirus is a hoax or is nothing more than the common cold. Or perhaps you have Fauci’d her because she’s posting selfies while in a maskless mosh pit.

Forbes

The term even made its way to the Urban Dictionary:

Declining to date someone because you don’t feel they’re taking COVID-19 seriously enough.

If I had a nickel for every time I found myself fauci-ing someone this year, I could pay off my student loans.”

Urban Dictionary

Check out this tweet where Axios managing editor, Margaret Talev, interviews Dr. Fauci over the new dating term coined using his name.

Dumping a date for their inconsiderate behavior during a global pandemic is perfectly justified but give them plenty of warnings first.

Social Media Trends as of October 2, 2022

TikTok #faucied: 66,600 views

Google Trends: faucied first appeared in Google’s search engine during the week of April 5, 2020. The popularity of the term waxed and waned until it peaked during the week of July 17, 2022.

faucied search term

Sources:

Axios. “Fauci learns how his name has been added to pandemic dating lexicon.” Twitter. February 14, 2021. URL: https://twitter.com/axios/status/1360971473288982531.

Lee, Bruce Y. “To ‘Fauci’ Someone Is Now A Covid-19 Coronavirus Dating Term, Here Are Others.” Forbes. February 22, 2021. URL: https://www.forbes.com/sites/brucelee/2021/02/22/getting-faucid-and-other-covid-19-coronavirus-dating-terms/?sh=34f4481b71b6

“Fauci-ing.” Urban Dictionary. November 10, 2020. URL: https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Fauci-ing.

Categories
Pandemic Pandemic Relationships

Turbo Relationship

It’s no surprise that during the pandemic many people felt lonely and isolated during periods of lockdown and quarantine. Many felt the constant restrictions on movement with each new Covid wave were never ending. Couples didn’t want to be stuck at home and apart from each other so many made the decision to move in together making lockdown easier to manage. Enter the “turbo relationship,” a positive side effect of the pandemic where couples felt their relationship moved at a quicker pace than it normally would have done during periods of lockdown and where commitment milestones happened faster.

This podcast presented by Shira and Ryan discusses how dating has changed during the pandemic which has led to the term “Turbo Relationships.” (Audacy). The discussion begins at 0:33:25.

A Yahoo news report said it was unclear where the term “turbo relationship” had originated from but that it was used heavily in a report called Relationships in Lockdown produced by dating websites eHarmony and Relate. Couples’ counselors met with focus groups and the findings came from a “nationally representative sample of more than 2,000 adults” (Miller). This is what the report found:

Coined ‘turbo relationships’, over a third agree that two months in isolation feels equivalent to two years of commitment, and the same amount say they’ve reached common relationship milestones, such as moving in together, quicker. This acceleration has also led to more sex, better communication and the opportunity to discover new, shared passions.

Relate

The relationship website DatingAdvice.com published a list of dating definitions on April 4, 2022 which includes the turbo relationship:

turbo relationship is like dating on steroids. It’s a relationship on the fast track on the highway to love. This relationship trend appeared more frequently during the beginning of the pandemic, when couples quickly decided to quarantine together rather than weathering the virus alone. With a turbo relationship, couples get serious super quickly, and often define the relationship by the second date.

By the end of the week, a couple in a turbo relationship may decide they’re a perfect match, confess their love to their new partner, and talk about a future together.

Spira

Watch the discussion below as Kulie and Yue discuss their own experiences with Turbo Relationships and ask some important questions. Are turbo relationships a good thing or are there drawbacks to moving so quickly?

courtesy of Tristanpope

Social Media Trends as of September 28, 2022

Facebook #turborelationship: people are posting about this
Instagram #turborelationship: people are posting about this

Google Trends: “turbo relationship” was first picked up in March 2020 when lockdowns began in the United States. The term hit a peak in July 2021 when the delta variant of Covid-19 gained ground forcing new lockdowns and quarantines. The popularity of the term began to subside at the end of August 2022.

turbo relationship search term

Sources:

Datable channel. “Turbo relationships during Covid: do they work?” YouTube. 2021. URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3aOaHZrBWmQ.

Miller, Korin. “’Turbo relationships’ are on the rise as pandemic brings some couples closer together.” Yahoo.com. June 25, 2020. URL: https://www.yahoo.com/video/turbo-relationships-rise-coronavirus-pandemic-brings-some-couples-closer-together-205925280.html.

Shira and Ryan. “What Is A Turbo Relationship?.” Audacy. October 15, 2020. URL: https://www.audacy.com/podcasts/lets-go-there-with-shira-ryan-22293/what-is-a-turbo-relationship-347946309.

Spira, Julie. “20 Modern Dating Definitions Singles Should Know.” Dating Advice.com. April 4, 2022. URL: https://www.datingadvice.com/online-dating/dating-definitions-2.

Tristanpope. “Dating Before and After Covid.” Reddit.com. 2020. URL: https://i.redd.it/fm48jczgwpu41.png.

Categories
Pandemic Pandemic Art Pandemic Relationships

Lockdown engagement

The pandemic changed all aspects of our lives and how we do certain things but it didn’t stop people falling in love and getting engaged. For many couples during periods of lockdown and/or quarantine, this is the first time they’ve been alone together for weeks or months on end. It can make it difficult not to step on each others’ toes. Being around someone 24/7 during lockdown allows you to see your partner’s strengths and weaknesses. It can certainly test a relationship but it can also make a person realize that the person they’re dating is the one they want to spend the rest of their life with so many did pop the question – hence the phrase “lockdown engagement.”

Although the phrase doesn’t appear in any dictionary definitions, it does appear a lot in social media. An article published in The National News on December 24, 2020 entitled “Glossary of 2020: the 36 new words and phrases that defined the year” had this to say:

As ubiquitous across social media as the sourdough starter (see below), the lockdown engagement is the act of popping the question because you’ve read the entire internet, watched everything on Netflix and are looking for the next distraction. US actress and singer Demi Lovato became the poster child for the lockdown engagement, when she and The Young and the Restless actor Max Ehrich got engaged one month after quarantining together.

Gemma White

The Hitched website that caters to weddings explains the difficulties that couples faced during this unprecedented time: “We spoke to three couples who said ‘Yes!’ during lockdown and discovered what it was really like to get proposed to during a global pandemic. From cancelled holidays where romantic proposals were planned to rings getting stuck in shut-down jewellery shops, lockdown certainly threw a spanner in the works! Add in not being able to hug your loved ones or tell them the good news face-to-face, and lockdown proposals really were – yep – an unprecedented experience” (Pye).

Early on in the pandemic, there were all kinds of dating and wedding websites offering advice to couples living together in lockdown. One British company specializing in elopement weddings had this to say: “Lockdown Engagements –  we’ve had a lot of enquiries recently from couples who have popped the question during this time (COVID 19). I’m loving hearing about these lockdown engagement stories – keep em coming! And I’m loving seeing love conquer all during this time!!” The company offers tips on how couples can celebrate their lockdown engagement during quarantine:

ZOOM LOCKDOWN ENGAGEMENT PARTY!

Organise a zoom party and surprise your nearest and dearest with the news! it’s that simple.

PLANT A TREE FOR YOUR LOCKDOWN ENGAGEMENT

Planting a tree, or a plant, some seeds or ANYTHING is a lovely idea. This doesn’t have to be a big plant and if you don’t have a garden, plant it in a pot for your home. You can watch it grow, and see it in years to come as a momentum of your lockdown engagement.

TREAT YOURSELF!

There are loads of services online that delivered bespoke hampers…Most local businesses are doing online deliveries at the moment – get a nice selection of your favourite things…and have a romantic date night.

Ever After Elopement Weddings

Lockdown inspired many content creators including those who make greeting cards. BrainBoxCandy who sells cards on Etsy created this “Lockdown Engagement” card.

courtesy of BrainBoxCandy

Here is one couple who had to change their original engagement plans due to Covid 19. They show how to plan an amazing lockdown engagement party!

Social Media Trends as of September 26, 2022

Facebook #lockdown engagement: 1,200 people are posting about this
Instagram #lockdown engagement: 4,508 posts

Google Trends: “lockdown engagement” first registered in February 2020 just before lockdown began but this may refer to users in China where the pandemic started. The popularity of the term peaked in December 2021 when the Omicron variant was spreading around the United States and the rest of the world resulting in more periods of lockdown and quarantine. This was a difficult time for couples because they couldn’t hold engagement parties and planning weddings during a pandemic with all the restrictions would have been almost impossible.

lockdown engagement search term

Sources:

BrainBoxCandy. “Cute Lockdown Engagement Card.” Etsy.com. 2020. URL: https://www.etsy.com/listing/835223981/cute-lockdown-engagement-card.

“Lockdown Engagement – celebrating your engagement during quarantine.” Ever After Elopement Weddings. April 28, 2020. URL: https://lowergrenofen.co.uk/lockdown-engagement-celebrating-your-engagement-during-quarantine/.

Pye, Helen. “This Is What It’s Like to Get Engaged During Lockdown.” Hitched. 16 July 2020. URL: https://www.hitched.co.uk/real-weddings/lockdown-engagement/.

White, Gemma. “Glossary of 2020: the 36 new words and phrases that defined the year.” The National News. December 24, 2020. URL: https://www.thenationalnews.com/arts/glossary-of-2020-the-36-new-words-and-phrases-that-defined-the-year-1.1134259.

Witty Vows channel. “How To plan home weddings/ engagement perfectly | Lockdown Engagement.” YouTube. July 14, 2020. URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TtQsY0D-5Ik.

Categories
Pandemic Pandemic Art Pandemic Relationships

Isolationship

The pandemic caused many people to isolate themselves during periods of lockdown and quarantine. Because of these extraordinary circumstances, complete strangers may have isolated together sometimes resulting in a romantic relationship. It may also refer to two people kept apart because of lockdown or because they were in an online relationship but travel restrictions made it difficult or impossible to see each other.

According to Barry Popik, a contributor to the Oxford English Dictionary, the term “isolationship” appeared on March 15, 2020 in a Tweet posted by Nyar Ombeyi, and as a Twitter hashtag posted by Stephen Trumble on March 18, 2020. Popik said the term was not used often enough to appear in Wiktionary or the Oxford English Dictionary. It does appear in the Urban Dictionary which defines the term as:

[a] long- or short-distance relationship between two people kept apart due to shelter-in-place constraints.

Their hot and heavy isolationship was getting weird, the limits of cyber romance coming clear. She lived three blocks away from him, they hadn’t been able to see the other for two weeks, each of them trapped in their apartments.

Monkey’s Dad

During lockdown, content creators Shawntia Key and Kerry Allen decided to make a web series called Isolationship which featured a “relatively-new couple, Lenae and Mitch, [who] have no choice but to learn how to navigate being trapped together. Every day. All day” (Isolationship.tv). The series was uploaded to YouTube during March 2021 and was produced entirely on smartphones.

courtesy of Louise

Social Media Trends as of September 23, 2022

Facebook #isolationship: 1,700 people are posting about this
Instagram #isolationship: 3,708 posts
TikTok #isolationship: 977,700 views

Google Trends: isolationship first appeared during the week of January 19, 2020 and peaked in March 2020 when most of the world was in lockdown.

isolationship search term

Sources:

Louise. “Coronavirus news dragging you down? Here are some hilarious memes & tweets to help lighten the mood – In an Isolationship” meme. The Honeycombers.com. URL: https://thehoneycombers.com/bali/funny-coronavirus-memes/.

Monkey’s Dad. “Isolationship.” Urban Dictionary. April 9, 2020. URL: https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Isolationship.

Popik, Barry. “Isolationship (isolated + relationship).” BarryPopik.com. March 25, 2020. URL: https://www.barrypopik.com/index.php/new_york_city/entry/isolationship.

Shawntia Key and Kerry Allen. “ISOLATIONSHIP.TV” Isolationship.tv. 2022. URL: https://isolationship.tv/#about-us.

Categories
Pandemic Treatment Virus

Paxlovid

Nirmatrelvir is an antiviral medication developed by Pfizer for treating mild to moderate cases of Covid-19. It is sold under the brand name Paxlovid.

The medication, which is taken orally, contains two medications: “Nirmatrelvir helps stop the SARS-CoV-2 virus from duplicating itself within the body. And ritonavir – a drug originally approved by the FDA for the treatment of HIV infection in adults and children – slows down the body’s breaking down of nirmatrelvir, allowing it to stay in the body longer” (Pelc).

In December 2021 the Food And Drug Administration (FDA) announced that Paxlovid had been granted Emergency Use Authorization. Eligibility requirements are as follows: “For the treatment of mild-to moderate COVID-19 in adults and children [12 years of age and older weighing at least 88 pounds (40 kg)] with a positive test for the virus that causes COVID-19, and who are at high risk for progression to severe COVID-19, including hospitalization or death, under an EUA.” For more information on the medication, including possible side-effects, visit here.

Some patients reported a nasty metallic taste in their mouth after taking the medication that can last for a while. This condition is called dysgeusia. Despite this unpleasant side effect, medical experts strongly suggest continuing with the full course of the treatment (Pelc).

Social Media Trends as of September 11, 2022

Facebook #paxlovid: 7,000 people are posting about this
Instagram #paxlovid: 4,384 posts
TikTok #paxlovid: 16.7 million views
YouTube #paxlovid: 604 videos and 350 channels

Google Trends: paxlovid first appeared during the week of October 31, 2021 when news of the antiviral medication being used as a possible cure for the treatment of Covid-19 started to appear. The Omicron variant was also at its peak around this time. The popularity of Paxlovid as a search term reached its peak during the week of July 17, 2022 when the medication became more widely available.

paxlovid search term

Sources:

“EMERGENCY USE AUTHORIZATION (EUA) OF PAXLOVID.” Food and Drug Administration. August 26, 2022. URL: https://www.fda.gov/media/155051/download.

Pelc, Corrie. “Paxlovid mouth: What is it and how to get rid of it.” Medical News Today. August 23, 2022. URL: https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/paxlovid-mouth-what-is-it-and-how-to-get-rid-of-it.

Categories
Pandemic Virus

Face shield

A face shield is a clear plastic protective covering for the face which many people wore, in addition to the mask, for added protection against coronavirus. The California Department of Public Health produced a handout containing a list of frequently asked questions about face shields. Here is some more information:

A face shield is a transparent barrier that covers the face and is typically open at the sides and bottom..[It is] primarily used by health care workers to protect their face (eyes, nose, and mouth) from splashes and sprays of body fluids. Face shields are not commonly used alone, but are often worn with other protective equipment, such as respirators or surgical masks, to protect the wearer from Covid-19. Examples include a nurse caring for a hospitalized Covid-19 patient or a health professional collecting a nasal sample from a person being tested for Covid-19.

Face shields are not to be worn in place of masks. The illustration below shows the correct way to wear a face shield with a mask:

Image by Freepik

Here is a quick and easy YouTube tutorial on how to make your own face shield that will protect you from someone who has suspected Covid-19:

Social Media Trends as of September 4, 2022

Facebook #faceshield: 194,000 people are posting about this
Instagram #faceshield: 471,958 posts
TikTok #faceshield: 132.7 million views
YouTube #faceshield: 4,100 videos and 3,100 channels

Google Trends: faceshield isn’t a new search term but it reached its peak in popularity during the week of April 5, 2020 as people looked for ways to make one or find out where to buy one to increase their protection from Covid-19.

faceshield search term

Sources:

“Faceshield FAQ.” California Department of Health. November 2020. URL: https://www.emergencyslo.org/en/resourcesGeneral/faceshield_handout.pdf.

“Person using face shield mask.” Freepik. URL: https://www.freepik.com/free-vector/collection-people-using-face-shield-mask_8381151.htm#query=face%20shield&position=11&from_view=keyword.

CreativityWindow channel. “DIY PPE: Quick and Easy Face Shield.” YouTube. April 4, 2020. URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v9FSDSc76q4.