"When you get people together for Thanksgiving, you're bringing together usually multigenerational groups, sometimes of people who've been in different areas, just kind of bringing together different bubbles, and that automatically elevates our risk. "It can be hard, because if you're gathering indoors, it's hard to distance. "Each family has a different risk of having the virus within the family. One of the most common outlooks is to scale back Thanksgiving, in hopes that things will be more manageable by Christmas. So the chances of that couple having a virus and exposing it to somebody is very, very low," Jenne said.
Source: CBC News October 03, 2020 00:11 UTC