2. How to manage COVID-19 risk when organizing meetings & events
Why do employers and
organizers need to think about COVID-19?
Organizers of meetings and events
need to think about the potential risk from COVID-19 because:
• There is a risk that people attending
your meeting or event might be unwittingly bringing the COVID-19 virus to the
meeting. Others might be unknowingly exposed to COVID-19.
• While COVID-19 is a mild disease
for most people, it can make some very ill. Around 1 in every 5 people who catch
COVID-19 needs hospital treatment.
Key
considerations to prevent or reduce COVID-19 risks
BEFORE
the meeting or event
• Check the advice from the
authorities in the community where you plan to hold the meeting or event.
Follow their advice.
• Develop and agree a preparedness
plan to prevent infection at your meeting or event. o Consider whether a
face-to-face meeting or event is needed. Could it be replaced by a
teleconference or online event?
o Could the meeting or event be
scaled down so that fewer people attend?
o Ensure and verify information and
communication channels in advance with key partners such as public health and
health care authorities
Pre-order
sufficient supplies and materials, including tissues and hand sanitizer for all
participants. Have surgical masks available to offer anyone who develops
respiratory symptoms.
o
Actively monitor where COVID-19 is circulating. Advise participants in advance
that if they have any symptoms or feel unwell, they should not attend.
o Make
sure all organizers, participants, caterers and visitors at the event provide
contact details: mobile telephone number, email and address where they are
staying. State clearly that their details will be shared with local public
health authorities if any participant becomes ill with a suspected infectious
disease. If they will not agree to this they cannot attend the event or
meeting.
Develop
and agree a response plan in case someone at the meeting becomes ill with
symptoms of COVID-19 (dry cough, fever, malaise). This plan should include at
least:
o
Identify a room or area where someone who is feeling unwell or has symptoms can
be safely isolated
o Have a
plan for how they can be safely transferred from there to a health facility.
o Know
what to do if a meeting participant, staff member or service provider tests
positive for COVID-19 during or just after the meeting
o Agree
the plan in advance with your partner healthcare provider or health department
DURING
the meeting or event
• Provide
information or a briefing, preferably both orally and in writing, on COVID-19
and the measures that organizers are taking to make this event safe for
participants. o Build trust. For example, as an icebreaker, practice ways to
say hello without touching.
o
Encourage regular hand-washing or use of an alcohol rub by all participants at
the meeting or event
o
Encourage participants to cover their face with the bend of their elbow or a
tissue if they cough or sneeze. Supply tissues and closed bins to dispose of
them in.
o Provide
contact details or a health hotline number that participants can call for
advice or to give information.
• Display
dispensers of alcohol-based hand rub prominently around the venue.
• If
there is space, arrange seats so that participants are at least one meter
apart.
- Open window and doors wherever possible to make sure
the venue is well Ventilated
- If any one who starts to feel unwell , follow our
preparedness plan or call to OHC.
- Depending on the situation in your area, or recent
travel of the participant, place the person in the isolation room. Offer
the person a mask so they can get home safely, if appropriate, or to a
designated assessment facility.
AFTER the meeting
1. Retain
the names and contact details of all participants for at least one month. This
will help public health authorities trace people who may have been exposed to
COVID-19 if one or more participants become ill shortly after the event.
2. If
someone at the meeting or event was isolated as a suspected COVID-19 case, the
organizer should let all participants know this. They should be advised to
monitor themselves for symptoms for 14 days and take their temperature twice a
day.
3. If
they develop even a mild cough or low-grade fever (i.e. a temperature of 37.3 C
or more) they should stay at home and self-isolate. This means avoiding close
contact (1 meter or nearer) with other people, including family members. They
should also telephone their healthcare provider or the local public health
department, giving them details of their recent travel and symptoms.
4. Thank
all the participants for their cooperation with the provisions in place .
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