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I'll let the mods decide whether this merits another thread but I think it's important that "the West" is gradually accepting that there are personal and social positives to populations wearing masks in the current pandemic.
Yes, they must be worn properly and hygiene concerns affect their effectiveness but there is a growing realisation that they can be an important additional weapon in this fight.
The 2 meters minimum distancing might not be as effective as previously thought too. I've been wearing FFP2/3 masks for a week or so now and will continue to do so.
The MIT research is particularly interesting in this article,it seems the 2 metre distancing might be optimistic in some scenarios. Yes,I know it's a minimum...
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-52126735
While yes I agree in an ideal world yes.
Until our front line NHS staff can get access to what they need to do their job (by that I mean our current national supply is restored as they can't buy what they need due due to their being none and certainly locally are working on people donating their personal stocks )
I won't be wearing one.
I've been using my N95 filtered commuter mask since this started
And don't intend to stop.
I have a friend that was locked down in Wuhan and he was appalled by the UK advice that masks weren't required. He sent lots of information from China about the proven effectiveness of masks/glasses even in highly concentrated viral locations such as ICU wards.
Where are these masks coming from?
It seems nuts not to wear masks as even if you doubt the ability to keep you safe it is proven in decades of surgical procedures to prevent you infecting others. The quickest way to stop a pandemic is surely to stop infecting each other? In the far East they'll wear one just for a cold as it's polite not to make everyone else ill.
One of my factories shipped me a load for free as they thought we were a bit mad. Seems there may not be a global shortage...
Anyone know where they can be purchased from? Had a look over the last few days and only Amazon stocking them and those appear to be dodgy cheap fakes selling for silly price.
From the linked article;
It says people who are sick and show symptoms should wear masks.
But it advises that healthy people only need to wear them if they are caring for others suspected of being infected or if they themselves are coughing or sneezing.
I have access to masks through work but will only be wearing one if I start to show symptoms.
The whole point of herd immunity is that we all catch it at some point so I see it as inevitable that me and my family will be ill eventually, hopefully not to a degree that requires medical intervention.
How long do the masks remain effective? Answering my own question, I assume it's not indefinite so will need replacing on a regular basis. Surely then, only using what could be a limited supply is sensible?
Any proper masks that are available at the minute should be going to the NHS.
Have you been properly fitted, are you wearing goggles too?
Are you staying at home as your supposed to be doing?
I’m calling trollocks on OP. He shouldn’t be in a situation currently where he is close enough to other people to need proper PPE
While yes I agree in an ideal world yes.
Until our front line NHS staff can get access to what they need to do their job (by that I mean our current national supply is restored as they can’t buy what they need due due to their being none and certainly locally are working on people donating their personal stocks )
I won’t be wearing one.
Im with trail_rat let the people who really need this stuff get it.
Most normal people aren’t going to be spending the day in such close contact with infected people.
Your odds are lower of infection and if people respect the current guidelines they should be even more every day 🙂
NHS workers odds aren’t and you really need them to be able to do their job.
Where are these masks coming from?
Haven’t you been listening to the daily press briefings with Public Health England and aa kinds of other govt spokespeople? They’re coming real soon now, within weeks, or maybe longer, oh look! A squirrel!!
My wife is a teacher, she has to go to work and is surrounded by people.
She is not just looking after the children of medical staff but also vulnerable children.
It’s her who I’m thinking of buying the masks for as hand sanitizer doesn’t appear to be sufficient.
My youngest is 11 and has asthma. My worry is my wife catching the virus at school and my daughter catching it.
It seems nuts not to wear masks as even if you doubt the ability to keep you safe it is proven in decades of surgical procedures to prevent you infecting others.
but in the current scenario if you’re ill the way to prevent to the spread to others is to stay home.
we see the use of masks in the east (typically, not in relation to this event) and presume they are worn as self protection but actually people wear a mask because they are ill. It’s out of politeness to others to wear it,
but now out of politeness to other you just stay home if you’re ill.
Any proper masks that are available at the minute should be going to the NHS.
I know folk are clapping us, giving us free and discounted food and the like, and I'm very grateful. But I can't help thinking home helps, folk that work in care homes and social care staff in general are equally as worth proper PPE and a clap to be fair.
Strange that the Chinese are happy to wear them and yet a lot these global pandemics start in China.
Do they work?
I'm with trail rat, as have mentioned elsewhere wife is itu doctor - we haven't even hit near peak yet and they're running out of ppe, or some areas can't even get it like police and community staff.
Thats where stocks should be going.
I’m calling trollocks on OP. He shouldn’t be in a situation currently where he is close enough to other people to need proper PPE
In his defence iirc he’s caring for an elderly relative in his household, and having to go out for supplies. He needs to guard against his own transmission.
I am though with the consensus it should be going to the front line first as a general rule. I pretty sure the advice is based on a carrier breathing / coughing / sneezing the Virus out rather than protecting against being a recipient host, in which case a mask is of limited protection.
The last thing the UK needs is 65 million people stockpiling 100 masks each and using/ replenishing them at the rate of 3-4 a day
Plus they don't make kids sizes etc etc
Make your own?
Won't be as good, but still better than none.
Any form of barrier has to reduce the odds.
So stocks just to doctors and nurses? Not other essential key workers?
Is it ok for other people looking after the potential health workers children to catch the disease and infect their families?
I’m very close to actually telling my wife she can’t go into school. The provisions available to her are pretty dire. It’s selfish of me, but my daughters health is my priority.
Personally I feel all key workers should have the face masks, from shop staff through to doctors and nurses. I know there is a shortage, but surely that must be fixable?
I’d agree that general public shouldn’t need them as they should be indoors. Also think more needs to be done with regards to food deliveries, but I’m only highlighting issues rather than suggesting fixes.
I dont dispute who needs to get the masks. I have already offered those I know in the NHS ours as and when they come in.
However I am just going to leave this here:
People with mild or no symptoms can have a very high viral load in their upper respiratory tracts, meaning they can shed the virus through spitting, touching their mouths or noses and then a surface, or possibly talking. Even people who don’t feel ill occasionally cough or sneeze.
We should be careful not to confuse things without absolute proof it works with bad ideas.
Strange that the Chinese are happy to wear them and yet a lot these global pandemics start in China.
Do they work?
They will only work if they are used properly and the VAST majority of people who wear them in public do not do this. If this were implemented for everyone it would likely give a false sense of security. Pointless waste of time for the general public that won't actually do anything to limit the spread of the virus. If people can't keep to the simple "stay 2m apart" then they won't be able to use masks properly.
If may daughters aren't able to wear a proper mask at work caring for patients, I wont be wearing one for the short time I'm out and about on my own...
If I had a stash of masks I know who I'd be giving them to. I can choose to keep out of the way of infected people. They have to get right up close to them.
Is it ok for other people looking after the potential health workers children to catch the disease and infect their families?
Well you have to start somewhere.
It makes sense to ensure those that have the ability to save lives have the kit they need and then tier back from there on a need basis.
As for trying to stop transmission in a school. - with a wife that's also a teacher. That's like trying to part the red sea.
Anyone know what you should do to sterilise re-usable masks?
we see the use of masks in the east (typically, not in relation to this event) and presume they are worn as self protection but actually people wear a mask because they are ill. It’s out of politeness to others to wear it,
but now out of politeness to other you just stay home if you’re ill.
Very much this. Maybe on the back of this event, changes in attitude and working practice will mean people with colds and flu will stay at home more rather than force themselves to go to work and pass it on.
Yes, other key workers should have access to proper masks in the pandemic, once frontline healthcare workers are properly equipped, and then maybe those caring for vulnerable relatives. But suddenly we have a nation stockpiling a billion masks, with a shelf life of 5(?) years, for a (hopefully) once in a 100 year pandemic.
Resilience longer term maybe needs to be around ramping up production locally at short notice
Make your own?
Won’t be as good, but still better than none.
Or it will encourage more people to use masks, pushing up demand, adding to supply problems. And at the same time does a diy mask worn by someone with no fitting, training etc and no regime for changing it actually mean there is increased risk from fitting, adjusting, fiddling with, removing a mask in close proximity to mouth eyes, nose...
Personally I am using a huge containment vessel - it’s not a hermetically sealed bubble but close enough that my family and I function within almost 24/7 - I’m staying in my house except when necessary to leave and then I try to see the fewest possible number of people, none of who seem to be coughing or sneezing so the fact that if they did it might travel further is a little moot.
So I have quite a few masks in my garage. (For Spray painting, brick dust etc.)
Not those little hang off your ear types but the 3M 6000 series and they have the ABE1 Gas & Vapour filters.
These are great masks, if you cover the filters you can’t breathe
Surely these would work far better than what I see being used and I’d happily donate them if we are that short??
I’m very close to actually telling my wife she can’t go into school.
Does your wife know you make all the critical decisions in her life for her? If she was a doctor would you stop her doing her job to save lives too? Teachers are enabling doctors, nurses and others to save lives and helping safeguard vulnerable young people.
My GP friend says masks are of little benefit to the general public. The masks need filters that need changing a lot.
My retired theatre nurse friend says: The type of masks that the public would wear wouldn't be effective because they need changing as much as every 20 mins. They get filled with moisture that can harbour germ/bacteria/virus. The public aren't used to using them, thus fiddling with them continually with their hand, meaning that they are touching their face. Touching one's face is something we must try to avoid.
I'm still seeing people (when out doing the daily exercise) coughing into their hands instead of sleeve or crook of arm, or worse just coughing.
It's a case of wearing the correct kind of mask and using it properly. IMO best to be left to the professionals.
It's pretty irrelevant now if FFP3 masks are proven to be effective in limiting the spread of the virus when used by the general public - you can't get hold of them at anything close to a reasonable price. Surgical masks are available but far less effective. That said if I was having to be in regular contact with others I'd probably be wearing one but as I'm able to stay at home, not in a high risk group and observe social distancing on the rare occasion when outside I don't think a surgical mask is worth it
Does your wife know you make all the critical decisions in her life for her
Victorian Dad husband
3M 6000 series and they have the ABE1 Gas & Vapour filters
They're the wrong filters. I believe they need to be a P3 filter to protect against the virus.
They're also the wrong filters to protect you from brick dust.
A - protection against organic vapours
B - protection against inorganic vapours
E - protection against acid gases
So if I managed to find a proper mask, and wear it correctly and change it frequently - does that mean I will never get the virus ?
That sounds great, but then I will always have to wear it wont I, as I will never become imune.
So, do I wait in isolation for a vaccine or just stay more than 2m from others.
Poly, we are in a strong relationship, she can tell me if I am doing anything that may endanger my child and vice versa. Our own children come before the needs of other children and our careers.
We both accept that we have had careers that affect our children’s lives, she had had to tell me to stop and not do something for the benefit of the children. People can get too consumed in their own jobs to see the affects it has on their own family.
This reminds me in a way of my time in the military, going to the gulf with jungle fatigues, having to wait for people to finish their tour before being handed down their desert gear.
The Generalist, have to admit when it comes to the life or the health of my children, then I’ll make a decision.
I guess it’s part of my background, debate and discussion is great. However there comes a time when a decision is needed.
My daughter has asthma, not a little niggle, but reasonably acute. Her health is my priority.
95 year old neighbour, who my family and I care for dearly, I've just about managed to convince her that this is for real. I've been keeping my distnce from her, calling her when I need to talk to her, as she's too deaf to hear from 2m away. Her health visitor wandered in yesterday, no mask or anything, straight in her house.
Now, there's every chance the girl doesn't have a mask, so I'm not annoyed at her, but we really need to get our shit together on this.
Just to add, you may think it’s a Victorian approach to want to protect my children, but if that’s the case so be it.
I was trained to make decision in critical situations.
We discuss where we go on holiday, we discuss what car to get, she works long crazy hours so I do most of the housework and child duties, in fact for most of these day to day things I’m a push over and she pretty much rules the roost. But when we are talking about putting the life of my child at risk, then I’ll make a decision.
wOOdster - you don't have to justify asking your wife. If I was in your position I'd been asking my husband to stop work. Ignore them, they aren't in your position.
No need to worry, we can all have a mask ... as long as we access to lingerie
No need to thank me, it’s for the greater good
I think Bunnyhop's post is pretty clear.
On a positive note masks may help you to reduce facial touching however:
-They may increase it.
-They have to be the right type.
-They have to available.
-They have to fit (no beards or other facial coverings including stubble).
-They have to used correctly.
-They have to be maintained correctly.
-They need to be disposed of correctly.
-They don't protect the eyes.
-PPE is always the last resort when the risk can't be mitigated using other methods.
In our current situation the main drive is to reduce the speed of spread (it's likely, even desirable it goes through the whole population, just in a managed way), by far the best way to do that is the current social isolation protocols.
Gloves are also not very useful, I don't think absorbing the virus through your hands is a major source of infection, touching your face is, gloved or naked hand makes no difference. Again you need to use them properly, dispose of them regularly, take them off correctly etc.
The advice is simple and effective, stay isolated, wash your hands and avoid touching your face, anything else for the general public at the moment is just a dangerous distraction.
FFP2 masks are 91% efficient at stopping the virus and normal surgical masks 68% according to TF1 news last night.
Anything that reduces the dose you get is good because it reduces the chance of you getting the minimum infective dose that's needed to make you ill by the percentage announced.
When they're available I'll be happy to wear one but there's a long list of people with higher priority at the moment. So I'll just stay at home and go for one shop shop a week at a "drive" where you buy on-line, scan a paper and they drop your shop directly in the boot of your car.
In case peopel aern't aware of owhat minimum infective dose is:
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/227225392_Minimum_Infective_Dose_of_the_Major_Human_Respiratory_and_Enteric_Viruses_Transmitted_Through_Food_and_the_Environment
Really depends where you are and proximity. If you're having to work with people or commute in close proximity to other people, even keeping 2 meter distance, then maybe.
Out in a park, countryside, barely anyone around, no. More so if on a bike and passing someone with clear distance.
That said I'm seeing people on rides wearing them now but more so walkers I pass either wear them or stand to the side shielding their face. The chances of either of us coughing and depositing enough viral load in a brief pass keeping distance is very low.
Anyway, a scarf is all you need. Trump said so.
To reassure people I pass I may wear a buff. I do have a stack of masks though they're DIY ones.
We have access to basic masks at work but I can't use them as they restrict my breathing enough to set off my asthma. Plus, as others have said up above, their use in the Far East is more to prevent an infected person spreading whatever they've got.
Once the US wakes up to the fact that Donald is talking bollocks and that they need a lot more PPE than they have access to we won't be able to get a mask for personal use anyway. They've already tried to play nasty with a possible vaccine, they'll play nasty with procurement of masks too.
ERICPD anyone?
PPE is not the first thing you reach for.
Some of the actions aren’t yet available or viable but isolation is for most of us.
ERICPD is an acronym used by health and safety organisations like IOSH and NEBOSH. It is a 6 step risk assessment model to help us prioritise health and safety hazard control measures in the workplace. It stands for Eliminate, Reduce, Isolate, Control, PPE and Discipline.
Gloves are also not very useful
Yep, this. The number of people you see in the supermarket, etc wearing gloves who then jump into their cars and drive off still wearing the same gloves... whatever was on those gloves from the shops is now all over your car, house.
There's a time and a place for gloves (along with procedures for changing them and taking them off). They're no substitute for a strong hand washing / sanitising regime though.
ERICPD is generally not meant for pandemics though, to be fair.
The USA have estimated that if the epidemic lasts for a year, they will need 3.5 billion masks just for medical workers.
I think suggesting to people that they should wear masks is probably a really bad idea right now, because as others have pointed out, the people on the front line who really need them will be unable to get hold of them as demand soars.
Inevitably, if you tell people to start wearing masks, there will also be a lot of people who decide that a mask makes it safe to start mingling again. People won't be able to get enough masks to change them as frequently as is necessary, so there will lots of people going about with re-used masks that are just incubating the virus.
The best preventative method is the official advice to stay at home, away from other people, as much as possible.
Gloves used appropriately are useful, however yes a lot of people are using them incorrectly. As a barrier ppe it should reduce the risk of skin contaminaton and therefore transfer and infection of self, but as someone said by wearing them continuously rather than being able to separate clean and dirty areas they become less useful.
Gloves used appropriately are useful...by wearing them continuously rather than being able to separate clean and dirty areas they become less than useful.
FTFY
People wearing gloves incorrectly are likely to think that their hands are clean, so are less likely to be washing their hands frequently or correctly - thereby actually increasing the spread of the virus.
As for re-using masks, putting them in the oven at 70°C and then quaranteening them for a couple of days gives them a new lease of life, French doctors are having to do it due to the shortage.
No sorry you haven't fixed it, what you have done is applied a conjecture to the statement, which by itself does not make my point incorrect.
Haven’t you been listening to the daily press briefings with Public Health England and aa kinds of other govt spokespeople? They’re coming real soon now, within weeks, or maybe longer, oh look! A squirrel!!
I believe the official line is they are millions available to everyone who needs them and now all NHS workers have been threatened with instant dismissal for contradicting the party line; everyone is happy!
People wearing gloves incorrectly are likely to think that their hands are clean, so are less likely to be washing their hands frequently or correctly – thereby actually increasing the spread of the virus.
+1 everyone in the local Coop / Tesco is wearing them, they just touch their face with their gloves rather than their fingers. Completely pointless...
Austria makes masks compulsory as protection debate shifts.
https://www.ft.com/content/f68f3063-5024-4654-9389-bcc7ee1efd8e
Photos of people with great handfuls of masks so no shortage there.
Gloves are also not very useful
Yep, this. The number of people you see in the supermarket, etc wearing gloves who then jump into their cars and drive off still wearing the same gloves… whatever was on those gloves from the shops is now all over your car, house.
I saw a nurse walk out of my local GP surgery last week wearing plastic apron, mask and gloves. She walked up to her car, took something out and back into the surgery. So whatever she’s trying to protect herself against is now spread nicely over her car key, door handle, everything she’s touched. And also taken whatever was on her car, etc, back into the surgery.
Having worked for years in the food industry I’m struggling to see why so many people are finding this difficult.
Staff of the NHS are far more exposed to Covid-19 than me, until they’re sufficiently supplied, they can have mine and I just won’t go outside.
Idle John
That's because the food industry is a lot more professional than many parts of the NHS. The people at the sharp end, A & E, ITU, theatres are probably world class in infection control etc. Many of the more routine roles aren't. On an anecdotal level I saw this first hand 10 years ago when my 1 year old son had to have surgery. We turned up and they had a bed ready, not much use with a one year old. They promptly swapped it for a clinical cot and got a cleaner to come in and clean it before he used it. So far so good. Cleaner starts cleaning, working hard in a very amateur way. Wasn't systematic, missed some bits, did other bits twice, only rinsed out the cloth a couple of times so at best missed bits and at worst spread any infection all over. Not her fault but clearly hadn't been trained to clean in a clinical setting. This amateurish behaviour was compounded later when a member of NHS staff came in with the cleaning contractors supervisor to do an audit. It was like your mother inlaw had turned up, one of them ran their finger along a ledge 7ft off the ground looking for dust whilst the other was onhands a knees perturbedthere was a crisp packet On the floor. They should have been observing the cleaning techniques of the cleaner and maybe taking samples from surfaces the kids could easily access. Cant fault the work ethic butthey might as well have not bothered.
He ended up with a hospital acquired infection after surgery, and extremely strong pump driven anti biotics. The hospital was brand new, been open 7 months.
That GP nurse is a shining example of not understanding properly. The general population is 10 times worse. The message to the public has to be simple in every way, correct use of PPE is well beyond most people.
I saw a nurse walk out of my local GP surgery last week wearing plastic apron, mask and gloves. She walked up to her car, took something out and back into the surgery. So whatever she’s trying to protect herself against is now spread nicely over her car key, door handle, everything she’s touched. And also taken whatever was on her car, etc, back into the surgery.
Maybe she hadn’t seen a patient in the ppe, so there was no cv29 risk there, then realised she needed something from her cv19 free car and decided rather than junk what is now valuable limited kit to go and get it, as there was no risk of cv19 exposure and limited risk of any significant other infection from her actions.
The last time I was in our local bakery (fortnight ago) there was hand sanitiser, which the staff politely asked the customers to use. I noticed not one man used the sanitiser, only women, except for 2 who loudly told me they didn't have to use it (when I'd pointed the sanitiser out to a customer).
These are the very people who shouldn't and couldn't be trusted with a mask, probably wouldn't wear one properly and maybe think it protects them, without taking the proper precautions of 'staying at home', washing their hands properly and keeping social distance.
Edit: My GP friend says her German friends are having to make their own mask, but there aren't enough filters for them to change frequently to make the masks useful.
ERICPD is generally not meant for pandemics though, to be fair.
It's appropriate for all settings. If you could mechanise the functions of NHS staff and elimnate them or put them somewhere remote from patients with infectious diseases, you would. It's just not practicable so you use PPE. Some risks are unavoidable, this is one of them if your job is looking after sick people, unfortunately - but it should be managed adequately. Things like social distancing and reducing visits to wards are being done, it's not simply a case of everyone putting on PPE (Even if it was freely available in sufficient quantities).
Those saying they'd happily deprive NHS staff or social workers and carers (this probably should include schoolteachers) of vital PPE to protect them/their precious family, you're part of the problem, and you might cause somebody critically ill not to get treated if NHS staff feel unduly at risk due to you using limited supplies.
On another note, the facemasks I've seen NHS staff wearing/fitting up recently have been ones with an exhale valve, which will keep particles out but won't stop an asymptomatic person spreading infection - so there's absolutely no point in wearing these to prevent spread from yourself, they only protect the wearer.
As with so many other things, as unpalatable as it is, it's about managing risk not eliminating it. We're pretty complacent as nothing like this has happened recently, but it is not possible to eliminate all risks - nature is a big and powerful thing.
Worst thing about this is that local facebook groups and mumsnet have learnt the phrase "PPE" but have absolutely not a clue what it means or how to use it in a meaningful sentence.
There is however symbolism in wearing a mask and an unspoken message that might influence other behaviours. It shows the herd that there is danger, and that others are taking it seriously and choosing to protect themselves. Hopefully that message will get through to other people and they will change their behaviours - stay at home, wash your hands, etc.
The biggest issue I have with that linked Beeb piece is that the research it cites from MIT really only sems to be about how far cough/sneeze borne nasties can travel, not whether or not that is actually a widespread mechanism of CV19 spread.
It's more alarmist click-bait for the sake of it.
The standing advice to avoid contact with others, avoid contact with hard surfaces/people that could harbour CV19 and wash your hands frequently/thoroughly was based on the idea that most people pick CV19 up by touching a contaminated surface or person, and then their own face, which TBH makes more sense than armies of the infected wandering about sneezing in strangers faces.
Anecdotally (I know) when I've been outside recently those that are out and about, (and observing 2m separation for the most part) are not coughing or sneezing their viral load all over the place. One assumes anyone that unwell has isolated themselves at home.
I've seen a few people wearing masks, stood at bus stops (I really wouldn't want to ride on a bus right now), walking about, even a few jogging and cycling, so clearly there's nothing to say you can't wear a mask, and there's no apparent stigma attached to it so crack on if you want.
But I'm still not clear if masks really defeat the spread of CV19, given that people are still as handsy as ever with their surroundings (and they are), and then once they get home presumably the first those people do is touch their face, to remove a mask...
As already noted given the limited supply and the fact that Frontline NHS staff are at most risk of acquiring and subsequently spreading CV19, they should be first priority for receipt of any PPE before the rest of us.
IdleJon
SubscriberHaving worked for years in the food industry I’m struggling to see why so many people are finding this difficult.
stumpyjon
SubscriberIdle John
That’s because the food industry is a lot more professional than many parts of the NHS.
I think you missed the words "most of" about the food industry.
Having worked in the food industry for over 30 years I don't think many understand the systems and procedures that are in place to safeguard the consumer, having just undergone yet another BRC audit and retained our AA rating I can tell you the slightest thing can get you non conformances.
While I know most of the NHS staff are superb it only takes a few careless ones to cause massive problems
On another note, the facemasks I’ve seen NHS staff wearing/fitting up recently have been ones with an exhale valve, which will keep particles out but won’t stop an asymptomatic person spreading infection – so there’s absolutely no point in wearing these to prevent spread from yourself, they only protect the wearer.
The risk to the NHS staff wearing these will be contracting the virus from a patient. If the patient is already in hospital with CV-19, they already got it and don't need to worry about being infected again.
Quite funny watching people walk about supermarkets with masks and gloves on. Also seeing people with scarfs over their faces lol Best bit was people jumping out the way of you.
Gloves will offer protection to someone dealing with a patient. They are disposed of after use. People that where them to a supermarket not doing anything to help stop the spread or protect themselves.
Masks are not going to really do anything unless people where them 24/7 and once they get moisture in them they are useless. The virus isn't "airborne" in the sense that it just floats about. It is carried on particles so someone has to transfer it by sneezing, coughing, spitting etc. If you are in a household where someone has symptoms you don't go to supermarkets.
Maybe she hadn’t seen a patient in the ppe, so there was no cv29 risk there, then realised she needed something from her cv19 free car and decided rather than junk what is now valuable limited kit to go and get it, as there was no risk of cv19 exposure and limited risk of any significant other infection from her actions.
And that shows a lack of knowledge about PPE in a clinical setting, how did she know the car wasn't contaminated, someone had just sneezed all over it. Scrubs aren't worn outside the operating theatre, people working in kitchens aren't supposed to wear their work clothes outside of the kitchens for example. Cross contamination in this case is a real threat. The PPE is there to protect patient and practitioner. The apron and mask in particular are disposable and should be changed between patients and definitely not worn outside of the clinical setting and then brought back into it.
I think you missed the words “most of” about the food industry.
I’d agree with that. Some of things I saw should have put me off food forever! 😂
Maybe she hadn’t seen a patient in the ppe, so there was no cv29 risk there, then realised she needed something from her cv19 free car and decided rather than junk what is now valuable limited kit to go and get it, as there was no risk of cv19 exposure and limited risk of any significant other infection from her actions.
I just typed out a long reply explaining what’s wrong with this post but I can sum it by saying, if this is the way people think then we’re all doomed!
Having read lots of news and scientific articles on this situation on Flipboard, I’m totally with Bunnyhop and stumpyjon on this, (see previous page posts). I have no masks, I have no access to masks, and even if I did, there are thousands of people in the U.K. whose need is far, far greater than mine!
Unless you have a proper FP3 or PF2 mask then the main benefit of wearing them is not to you but to everyone else. They are far better and stopping anything coming our of your mouth or nose than they are at preventing stuff coming in.
I tried a basic mask the other day and I had to get rid of it after ~10mins, it made my slight breathing discomfort worse.
Some of things I saw should have put me off food forever!
Yep, used to work for a company that made metal detectors for food plants. One of the models was for sausage making, the pipe with the sausage goo would run through the middle. The metal detectors sometimes came back for repairs, often full of sausage goo that had turned green.
Ok, as the op I'll "justify" why AND when I bought the masks.
Way back on the original coronovirus thread when the consensus was that this will just blow over, there were a couple of posters that insisted it wouldn't. At that point I was hoping they were wrong but I tended to agree with them in part.
Back then 5L bottles of IPA 99% were still cheap and so were masks...though prices of both were edging up.
I bought some FFP2 masks from my corner shop of all places in his little diy section and at the time I said to him that he should get some more in if he could as they were going to be like rocking horse poo soon. He just gave me a humouring smile. At this point even I thought I was going a bit loopy buying masks and just wasting money.
I also bought 3 ffp3 masks online and 10 surgical style masks as they were very cheap.
Of those I now have 3 left in the house. 1 ffp3 and 2 ffp2's. One ffp2 is damaged but I'm going to repair the strap on that one. I reuse them but first they are sprayed with IPA inside and out and left to dry. Not ideal but it's better than nothing. Used for very occasional food shop, getting meds or the nightly walk I take round the "block".
Here's where the rest went:
2 to my lad and partner, they were just expecting their first baby a couple of weeks back and she had a CZ. So going to and fro hospital etc.
4 to my partner who house shares with a lady with severely reduced kidney function. The extra 2 were for her parents as at the time they were going to a warfarin clinic once a week via bus and insistence on doing food shopping themselves. They still are!
1 to A friend that lives down the road who recently finished chemo therapy as he INSISTS on going to the corner shop no matter what I tell him.
The surgical style masks were all given to my partner as she works in a path lab in the NHS. She isn't front line but is friends with those that are. I just said to hand them out to whoever she wanted to at work. It's a single rain drop in a storm but better than nothing.
I gave 2 masks back to the corner shop I bought them from ironically as well as IPA in spray bottles as they are nice people and inherently coming into contact with a lot of people.
The IPA is watered down to 70%. It then goes into 100ml reusable spray bottles I got from Amazon. Those bottles as well as (relabelled!!x) Cola bottles of IPA were also given out to the same people as above as well as a few random friends.
Does the above make me a saint, of course it f*** doesn't. It also sure as s doesn't make me some sort of selfish prick.
All I did was make a conscious decision to buy some provisions that might help me keep some people I care derply about safe at a time when most would have thought I was being a complete "prepper" idiot. Including myself.
Want someone to blame? Consider those that have voted Tory over the last decade but are the first to criticise the NHS even in normal times. It would still be struggling during this emergency but it sure as hell would have been in a better state to deal with it than it currently is.
Sorry for the above "rant" but even the inference that trying to be prepared for this pandemic somehow makes me a selfish prick genuinely angers me.
I just typed out a long reply explaining what’s wrong with this post but I can sum it by saying, if this is the way people think then we’re all doomed!
Let us say the nurse is just doing jabs and the like and the ppe is just to protect her against cv19 rather than a requirement for the procedure she’s undertaking, in the present circumstances, pandemic, severe lack of kit, not trashing it because you left the confines of a surgery but weren’t exposed to any cv19 risk makes perfect sense.
Let us say the nurse is just doing jabs and the like and the ppe is just to protect her against cv19 rather than a requirement for the procedure she’s undertaking, in the present circumstances, pandemic, severe lack of kit, not trashing it because you left the confines of a surgery but weren’t exposed to any cv19 risk makes perfect sense.
So she’s just unwittingly carried it out to her car because she’s been in contact with an asympomatic person.
My bad scenario as per my previous post;
Let us say the nurse is just doing jabs and the like and the ppe is just to protect her against cv19 rather than a requirement for the procedure she’s undertaking, and she hasn’t seen a patient in the kit, in the present circumstances, pandemic, severe lack of kit, not trashing it because you left the confines of a surgery but weren’t exposed to any cv19 risk makes perfect sense.
Let us say the nurse is just doing jabs and the like and the ppe is just to protect her against cv19 rather than a requirement for the procedure she’s undertaking, and she hasn’t seen a patient in the kit, in the present circumstances, pandemic, severe lack of kit, not trashing it because you left the confines of a surgery but weren’t exposed to any cv19 risk makes perfect sense.
So she’s just rubbed up against her never-sanitised car, interior, etc, opened the door with her previously clean gloves on and is now carrying any infection that she, her family or anyone who has been in the car has had.
Even taking away the threat of Covid-19, the insides of cars are disgusting places.
Not ideal with the gloves but unless a patient is going to lick her mask, apron etc seems a low risk and as mentioned desperate times lead to less than optimal practices
@Poopscoop never apologise for caring about not just your loved ones but others too. You've really gone the extra mile, hold your head high and ignore any muppets on this thread.
Not ideal with the gloves but unless a patient is going to lick her mask, apron etc seems a low risk and as mentioned desperate times lead to less than optimal practices
Ok. So our hypothetical nurse has leaned into her car and infected her gloves and apron with Covid-19 that she didn’t realise that her kids were carrying. She goes back into the surgery and gives a jab to her next patient, not realising that she’s rubbed her gloves against his skin/shirt/whatever. He then touches the infected area, doesn’t wash his hands, eats his lunch, contracts the virus and dies. (She has also touched plenty of internal surfaces in the surgery - door handles and the like.) It’s a small chance, but I’d guess the question is ‘what’s so important in her car?’
And if there was such a lack of masks/aprons/gloves she should have taken them off before walking into the car park, and put them back on when she returned.
