the Marks on the floor shows clearly that one should keep distance in the queue for the checkout in the supermarket.
A woman poses yet so close to Charlotte Boserup can almost feel her breath on his neck.
She turns around and tells her to keep more distance.
“You don’t need to be so hysterical. It is not worse than the flu,” replies the woman.
It was the last time that Charlotte traded into in the supermarket during the corona epidemic. She is a nurse and experienced in the last Friday again, which she calls a scary behavior.
“I feel more exposed to be infected, when I buy groceries, than when I work at the hospital,” she says.
On Friday, it began already in the parking lot in front of the Referendum, how she should act after his guard at Slagelse Hospital. No one kept a distance, when they walked past each other on the way in and out. Much better, it was not in the actual store, where customers huddle together.
“When you walk around inside, many in clusters, talking and blocking the aisles instead of moving on, so you don’t have to stand too close to each other everywhere in the store,” says Charlotte.
As an employee of the health service as she knows how important it is to keep the distance and take the precautions seriously. At the hospital she sees the consequences when it does not happen. In order to protect her husband, who is at risk, is Charlotte moved up in the family cottage around Skælskør. She has now chosen to isolate themselves even more, by yourself to completely avoid shopping in supermarkets again.
“It worries me that people are irresponsible and selfish. It is hard word, but it is the right thing.”
The first many times, where Charlotte experienced traders ignore the rules and stand close to each other, she tried friendly to make them aware of the risks. The reactions were far from positive.
“When I confront someone with it, I’m met with a indifference or the sky with the eyes. The same experience kassemedarbejderne, and one of them thanked me, therefore, to try to say.”
Supermarkets are among the few shops still open in Denmark, and it marks the places where many customers are trading in at the same time. Easter is approaching, and it is one of the busiest times for dagligvarebutikkerne, causing Charlotte Boserup to fear, that the problems explodes.
For the more people there are gathered in the same place, the greater is the risk of contamination.
despite repeated calls from the authorities and the supermarkets watches Charlotte constant families, where everyone goes to shop, and neighbors who hyggesnakker by their display freezers, while other customers trying to squeeze past without bumping together.
It is as if more and more are beginning to relax the rules, she explains.
“Mette Frederiksen, has perhaps committed the mistake that she has made people too optimistic by saying that you are looking at open Denmark after easter. Now does anyone think that it is not so dangerous any more, but we have not cracked the basket yet.”
Many people flock in these days also from the cities out to the sommerhusområderne, and it increases the pressure on the smaller shops. As a defence against the wave of ferieramte customers have several merchants and supermarkets have introduced restrictions on the number of traders from the same household, which is enforced by the employees or the security services in front of the stores.
most Recently, Police called for the use of dagligvarebutikkernes extended opening hours at easter in order to avoid queuing for many people in the same place.