Scientists Hosting 4000 People COVID19 Concert To Find New Normal

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According to a Daily Mail article, German scientists are planning to stage a concert for 4,000 participants to track how COVID-19 spreads and see if large indoor events can be held safely.

What is it?

A team from the Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg are recruiting people for a ‘coronavirus experiment’ at an indoor stadium in Leipzig with singer-songwriter Tim Bendzko on August 22.

  • Scientists at Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg are recruiting 4,000 to attend a Tim Bendzko concert at a stadium in Leipzig, Germany, on August 22
  • Researchers say the aim is to determine how to host a large indoor event while limiting the risk of spreading the coronavirus 
  • All concert-goers will be wearing face masks and will be required to get a test 48 hours before that shows they are negative
  • They will be wearing contact tracers around their necks that transmit signals and use fluorescent hand sanitizer to identify ‘high-touch’ areas 

How Will it be done?

Concertgoers, in masks, will wear a device around their necks that sends a signal at five-seconds intervals showing where they are in the stadium.

  • Everyone will attend three concerts and the first will be with no social distancing as done pre-pandemic and coming through just two main doors.
  • The second will be people coming through eight different doors and every second seat blocked off.
  • For the third and final concert, only 2,000 people will be allowed into the stadium – which seats 12,000 – and will be sitting five feet (1.5 meters apart).
  • Participants will wear a ‘contact tracer’ the size of a ‘matchstick around their necks that sends a signal at five-second intervals showing how close they are to other audience members.
  • Scientists will also give people fluorescent hand sanitizer so they can see any surfaces that have been touched often and are ‘particularly dangerous.’

A fog machine will also be used at the event so researchers can study if the virus is spread via aerosols.

Scientists at Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg are recruiting 4,000 people to attend a Tim Bendzko concert at a stadium in Leipzig, Germany, on August 22. Pictured: Bendzko performs live on stage during the Festival Stars For Free at the Kindlbuehne Wuhlheide in August 2017, Berlin, Germany

Scientists at Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg are recruiting 4,000 people to attend a Tim Bendzko concert at a stadium in Leipzig, Germany, on August 22. Pictured: Bendzko performs live on stage during the Festival Stars For Free at the Kindlbuehne Wuhlheide in August 2017, Berlin, Germany.

All concert-goers will be wearing contact tracers around their necks that transmit signals and use fluorescent hand sanitizer to identify 'high-touch' areas. Pictured: Bendsko at the 'Am seidenen Faden - Unter die Haut' Tour in Palladium

All concert-goers will be wearing contact tracers around their necks that transmit signals and use fluorescent hand sanitizer to identify ‘high-touch’ areas.

Old & New Normal Middle Way?

We are trying to find out if there could be a middle way between the old and the new normal that would allow organizers to fit enough people into a concert venue to not make a loss,’ Dr Stefan Moritz, head of Martin Luther University’s clinical infectious diseases, told The Guardian.

Volunteers for project Restart-19 must be between ages 18 and 50 and must test negative for the virus 48 hours before attending.

As of Tuesday, 878 volunteers have signed up to see Bendzko, who released his debut album in 2011.

The event, which will cost about $1.14 million (€990,000), is being paid for by the federal states of Saxony and Saxony-Anhalt, reported The Guardian.

Is there any risk?

On Martin Luther University’s website, the team says the risk of contracting COVID-19 at the concert is ‘very low‘ but not impossible.

Researchers say they hope to ‘identify a framework‘ for holding large events without endangering people’s lives and hope to share results in October.  

In the US, there are more than 3.8 million confirmed cases of the virus and more than 141,000 deaths.

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Source: Daily Mail UK