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Gaming, Cosplay, and Con Crud, Oh My!

It’s time for PAX West, a convention for the gaming community and one of the largest events hosted at the Washington State Convention Center in Downtown Seattle. PAX – which stands for Penny Arcade Expo – was first held in Bellevue in 2004 and had approximately 3,300 people in attendance. PAX is now a general term used to refer to a series of gaming culture festivals held all over the globe that involve tabletop, arcade, and video gaming as well as some epic cosplays. PAX West opens on Friday and will bring tens of thousands of people to downtown Seattle. Be prepared for legions of cosplayers and badge wearers in downtown, even if you aren’t attending.

So… what is “con crud”?

“Con crud” is an artificial term that refers to the common cold, mild flu, or other non-threatening illness that may strike towards the end of a convention, or soon after leaving. You might have also heard it called PAX pox, festival plague, or even nerd flu.

Conventions are a prime place for disease to spread: large crowds in confined spaces; lack of proper hand-washing and respiratory etiquette, like covering coughs; lowered immune responses from travel, stress, lack of sleep, poor diet, and inadequate hydration; alcohol consumption; and – in the case of a gaming convention – many shared devices being touched by hundreds of people (controllers, keyboards, mice, headsets, tablets, etc.).

At PAX in 2009, there was an outbreak of H1N1 (around 100 confirmed cases) that contributed to the national outbreak that was spreading throughout the country.

So what can you do to prepare?

Let’s review some ways to avoid the convention plague known as “con crud”:

 

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