Minnesota workplaces reopening on Monday won't look the same since they closed under the governor's stay-at-home order.
Social distancing? Yep. Protective face masks? Likely a recommendation.
Taking temperatures?
Whatever is necessary to help stop the spread of COVID-19, according to state health commissioner Jan Malcolm.
"More and more employers are going to be doing health screenings," said Malcolm on the WCCO Morning News with Dave Lee. "Really, we're requiring them to do health screenings, to ask their employees if they're sick if they've been in contact with someone with signs of COVID."
Those screening are likely to including taking temperatures.
"None of these things are guarantees by themselves, not everyone who gets COVID gets a fever, for example," she said.
"We're just looking for all the layers of protection that we can build in. A lot of things in combination can really help protect us."
Malcolm also stressed that you should go to your doctor for other ailments, checkups, or, in the case of children, to receive immunization updates.
"Boy, are we seeing a real example right now of what it means when we don't have protection," Malcolm said.
Malcolm says the stay-at-home order appears to have done its job of pushing back the peak of the coronavirus outbreak, allowing time for the state's health care agencies to build up staffing and testing and bed capacity.
"I don't have any sort of a guess that I would trust on how many of us might have been exposed," said Malcolm. "But I think a very, very low percentage, given our relatively low rate of confirmed cases."
"We still expect to (see) a large number of people needing care at any one time," she said. "We have bought that time. We've pushed out that wave, from everything we can tell, probably into late June-July kind of time frame. Hopefully, we'll see continuing to keep the rate of growth at a manageable level for our health care systems. That's the whole goal."
The number of laboratory-confirmed coronavirus cases in Minnesota is 3,446.
That's after a high of 261 new cases since Friday's numbers.
That includes 244 fatalities, and 1,654 patients who have recovered.
The number of fatalities increased by 23, which is Minnesota's largest one-day increase of deaths from coronavirus.
The state health department is reporting 56,597 tests performed.