On a Monday morning, two weeks ago, a San Francisco Uber driver woke up feeling sick. He had a persistent dry cough, scratchy chest, was short of breath and wheezed when he breathed deeply. He knew these were possible symptoms for COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, so he re-traced his past few trips. A couple of alarming interactions came to mind, including one passenger who coughed up blood and another who admitted he’d been infected.
San Francisco hadn’t yet become a ghost town with most businesses shuttered and residents hunkering at home under a mandatory “shelter in place” order. People were still out and about. Beauty salons, movie theaters, bars and most corporate offices still teemed with people….
Source CNET Tech
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