How to stay safe and healthy in large crowds and venues

July 28, 2015

The advice here is not to avoid crowds. Rather, follow to these tips that just might keep you and your loved ones safe and healthy while you're out living life to the fullest.

How to stay safe and healthy in large crowds and venues

You're seated in a venue with a thousand other people. Which do you feel more threatened by: a fire or a stranger sneezing on you?

The first is unlikely, the second poses a relatively minor health risk. But they pose risks nonetheless. And with a little forethought, you'll be able to protect yourself in the rare event that something goes wrong.

Carry a bottle of hand sanitizer

Use it after portable toilet visits, before eating and any time you feel contaminated by the microbes of the masses.

Put a pair of earplugs in your bag or pocket

If an event gets too loud, or you get stuck standing next to the speakers, use the earplugs.

Pack your own lunch

Peanut butter and jam sandwiches and apples keep for the whole day and discourage your children's pleas for junk food at the venue.

  • If you can't avoid it, check out the vendor. Does the stall look clean? Is the vendor wearing gloves? Does he or she handle money, then touch the food?
  • It's hard to tell just by looking at it if food will make you ill, but avoid pink meat and food that should be served hot but isn't.
  • The last thing you need when you're in a place that has only portaloos is food poisoning.

Put a wad of tissues in your handbag or pocket

Now you have toilet paper if you have to use the portable toilets.

Put water bottles in the freezer the night before

You'll save money on overpriced bottled water at the event and, as the ice melts, you'll have nice cold water on hand to stay hydrated.

Keep your hands in your pockets

Germs get on hands, hands touch face, germs enter body, you are infected. Where there are crowds, there are germs — millions of them — on every surface.

  • Don't touch them and they won't make you sick.
  • Note emergency-exit signs as you enter a large venueIt takes only seconds — and those seconds could turn out to be the most worthwhile ever.
  • One study found that more than half of fatalities at concerts occurred when people were trying to get out of the building or concert setting.

Arrange a place to meet

Actually, you should choose two places — one inside and one outside — where you will meet your family or friends in case you get separated.

In the rare event of a stampede

Try to move sideways to the crowd until you get to a wall. Then press yourself against it until the crowd dissipates, or you find a better exit.

  • It doesn't happen often, but people do get trampled to death.
  • If you've memorized the emergency exits, you'll have a better chance of getting to one that the rest of the crowd may not have noticed.

Dress in layers

If you've dressed in layers, you can shed one of them if you get too hot. If you're wearing only one layer to start with, you might just get arrested! Of course, layering your clothing works the other way, too. If the temperature drops when the game goes into overtime, you'll be prepared.

Sit and wait when the curtain comes down

Let the crowd go first. You'll get out of the parking lot more easily and avoid ruining your great time out with a bout of blood pressure-raising stress.

The material on this website is provided for entertainment, informational and educational purposes only and should never act as a substitute to the advice of an applicable professional. Use of this website is subject to our terms of use and privacy policy.
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