Pulse August 2020 | Page 51

or procedures, including: making hand sanitizer available to all guests, posting visible reminders about hygiene and sanitation standards, and welcoming guests with touchless greetings. By the time the April Snapshot Survey closed a month later, 99 percent of all spas had closed in response to the pandemic. As time passed, local, state and national governments—along with organizations such as the CDC and WHO—issued more defined guidance on how best to respond to COVID-19’s spread. The April and May Snapshot Survey results indicate that spas were quick to integrate this guidance into their policies and procedures. For example, in April, 49 percent of all spa respondents said they would offer guests the opportunity to bypass locker rooms and go directly to treatment rooms. By May, 73 percent of spa respondents planned to institute this procedure upon reopening. Similarly, greater percentages of spas planned to remove items from communal snack and beverage areas (April: 63 percent; May: 90 percent), reduce the number of items on treatment menus (April: 36 percent; May: 69 percent) and require estheticians to wear face shields during services (April: 51 percent; May: 81 percent). By the time ISPA’s May Snapshot Survey closed, certain policies and procedures—especially those involving sanitation practices or the use of personal protective equipment (PPE)—had become all but standard. Those rising figures are indicative of an overall pattern that emerged as spas received increasingly (though not entirely) consistent guidance from governments, organizations and professional associations. By the time ISPA’s May Snapshot Survey closed, certain policies and procedures—especially those involving sanitation practices or the use of personal protective equipment (PPE)—had become all but standard. For instance, 86 percent of spa respondents planned to allot more than the typical 15 minutes to sanitize and prepare treatment rooms between appointments upon reopening, 81 percent of spas anticipated offering face masks to employees and guests and only six percent planned on not screening the temperatures of either guests or employees when they enter the spa. The May survey suggests that policies like these have coalesced into AUGUST 2020 ■ PULSE 39