The Worst Place to Go in Your Gym During Coronavirus

DON’T SET FOOT IN THE SAUNA OR STEAM ROOM IF YOU WANT TO STAY SAFE.

Young white woman lifting weights and wearing a mask
Shutterstock/Dirima

After weeks or even months of working out at home, many people are eager to get back to their favorite fitness facilities. But even as gyms, fitness centers, and workout studios reopen, the danger of contracting or spreading coronavirus still lurks. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have issued several guidelines for gym-goers to follow to keep their risk low, which include maintaining social distance, wiping down equipment frequently, avoiding equipment that can’t be easily sanitized (such as resistance bands), and wearing a face covering when interacting with people or doing low-intensity activities. But health experts say that there’s also a whole area of your gym that you should avoid for the time being, due to coronavirus: the sauna or steam room.

The CDC guidelines don’t specifically say to shun the sauna altogether, but they do recommend maintaining the proper six feet of distance while enjoying it. Based on the size of your facility’s sauna, this may not even be possible with more than one person inside. And any mask or face covering you wear would be useless the moment it got wet.

“Anything that can potentially aerosolize the virus is dangerous,” says Janette Nesheiwat, MD, family and emergency medicine doctor. “Saunas, steam rooms, and nebulizer treatments can spread the virus, which can remain in the air for hours at a time.”

Empty sauna

Shutterstock/Krivosheev Vitaly

The International Health, Racquet & Sportsclub Association (IHRSA) notes in its safety guidelines for gym and fitness center owners that “the hard surface, temperature, and humid conditions [of a sauna] means the virus may be more likely to survive” inside. For this reason, they recommend that gym owners sanitize the sauna or steam room between users, which is likely not feasible in most facilities. You should assume then, that any public or semi-public sauna has not been cleaned before your arrival and steer clear.

Even more frightening, saunas and steam rooms have been touted for years as a great way to “sweat out” a cold. Though it’s been advised by various medical authorities that individuals showing symptoms of coronavirus—which often include cold-like symptoms such as cough, runny nose, and loss of taste and smell—stay home and self-isolate, you can’t be sure that everyone around you is following that recommendation. You could end up in the sauna right after a person who thought they’d attack a “cold”—that’s really COVID-19—with heat and humidity.

Source: https://bestlifeonline.com/gym-sauna-coronavirus/?utm_source=msn&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=msn-feed

Author: Dennis Hickey

There are no limits to success to those who never stop learning. Learning will nourish your personal growth. I hope you enjoy this website and visit often so you too keep learning and growing.

%d bloggers like this: