COVID-19 & Beyond: Well Living Lab Safe Indoor Environment Program
The COVID-19 pandemic has created unforeseen challenges for individuals worldwide.
High infectiousness and viral transmission by asymptomatic individuals, coupled with the time required to administer approved vaccines at a global level, underscore the continued importance of infection control through environmental measures. Buildings have a tremendous impact on our health and well-being, and the role of indoor spaces has now become more important than ever.
The Well Living Lab (WLL) is uniquely positioned to bring together building and health sciences expertise and technologies to conduct research and generate and disseminate discoveries to make indoor environments safer to occupy.
Through the COVID-19 & Beyond: Well Living Lab Safe Indoor Environment Program, we are evaluating methods and establishing guidelines to reduce AIR and SURFACE viral transmission and enhance BEHAVIORAL responses, such as an individual’s resilience, well-being, and performance.
COVID-19 & Beyond: Well Living Lab Study Announcements
COVID-19 Resources
While most of us have a general idea that our immune system helps us fight off infections – like COVID19, most of us haven’t given too much thought to this important defense system.
The coronavirus has upended almost all aspects of daily life for almost everyone. This is perhaps most strongly evident for the millions of school children who are now learning from home.
If possible, Well Living Lab experts encourage you to create a workspace at home during COVID-19 pandemic that has sounds or quiet to your liking and that is not distracting and has windows so you can look outside, with shading as needed to avoid glare on your computer screen.
Just as what you put in your mouth affects your health and well-being, so does what you put into your home environment, even the news you are consuming on TV and your devices that fill your home with messages.
It’s normal to have anxiety, fear and stress during this unsettling time of a COVID-19 pandemic. What we consume in the media, what we hear from friends and family and what we experience as we stay inside our homes or apartments for long periods of time all contribute to our personal responses.