Huh?@Shop-et-al wrote:
@shoptastic: I am going to stop you there. You added something to someone else's words (mine). Please remove your added notions from my statements and then begin to think only about the few words that I posted. That is the starting point.
CA?@NinS wrote:
I don’t need to worry anymore about whether my last two indoor dining assignments are safe. Both clients canceled the shops this week.
I got tired of the snippy attitude of the Coyle scheduler. She’s wasting everyone’s time. There is no leisure travel in CA under the Stay at Home order, yet she’s sending out requests.@shoptastic wrote:
CA?@NinS wrote:
I don’t need to worry anymore about whether my last two indoor dining assignments are safe. Both clients canceled the shops this week.
Interesting.@NinS wrote:
East Coast. Indoor dining is still open at limited capacity but these are national clients that are likely getting battered. One was the Mexican restaurant on Marketforce.
Thanks for asking.@ColoradoShops wrote:
How's your son feeling? @SoCalMama
I shall keep your family in my prayers. My own dad is a very high risk person (elderly with heart disease). I know the constant feelings of fear. I have a list of people on this forum I pray for and have added you all.@SoCalMama wrote:
I’m in pretty good health. My husband would not survive if he got sick, so we are fortunate that he had no plans to come home for thanksgiving.
@sparklesthekitty wrote:
It's very naive to think that wearing cotton masks is bullet proof. Research shows the virus particles DO pass through cotton masks fairly easily. Were talking a .15 micron particle passing through even an N95 mask which is .30 microns.
Even healthcare professionals are warned against using cotton masks because there have been documented higher transmission rates with cotton than surgical masks.
The ideal way is to wear a sterile surgical mask for 20 min then switch out to a new one.
Most people don't wear masks the right way. There is LOTS of cross contamination when you take it off, place it elsewhere, put it back on, etc. You're transferring germs.
Infectious disease specialists even say that your highest risk factor of contracting Covid is being in close contact with an infected person for 15 minutes, mask or no mask.
Masks are not bullet proof.
Assuming you're accurate about COVID being .15 microns, would it not require a completely free floating one with enough wind gust to penetrate a mask blocking out .3 microns? What if the virus particle were part of a spit droplet (which is how they usually are when coming out of your mouth, no? - unless it's just "floating in the air" inside your mouth)?@sparklesthekitty wrote:
It's very naive to think that wearing cotton masks is bullet proof. Research shows the virus particles DO pass through cotton masks fairly easily. Were talking a .15 micron particle passing through even an N95 mask which is .30 microns.
Masks are not bullet proof.
@ wrote:
IF YOUR TIME IS SHORT
This attempt to discredit a fundamental piece of protective gear used and studied around the globe fails to account for several fundamental scientific principles.
The COVID-19 particle is small, but it always exists bonded to larger particles of water, protein, mucus and other materials expelled by breathing, coughing, etc. These are all well above the 0.3 micron size of the N95 filter.
The N95 filter also filters particles smaller than 0.3 microns very efficiently because particles under that size have a high amount of erratic movement and are electrostatically drawn to the mask fibers.
Do you have a source for this?@sparklesthekitty wrote:
They only help with blocking out large respiratory droplets, such as through coughing or sneezing. A large portion of transmission occurs through asymptomatic carriers which do not produce large droplets but aerosolized droplets such as speaking.
Actually, you said N95 masks, but I see what you mean, I think. You're implying that that's a best case scenario and even then it wouldn't work (which my Politifact article disproves).@sparklesthekitty wrote:
I'm talking about COTTON masks and you're citing N95 masks.
Here's a JAMA article about N95 and surgical masks: [jamanetwork.com]
re: Japan - It has a looser mask mandate, but full societal, voluntary cooperation.@sparklesthekitty wrote:
Most nations? You're citing Japan and South Korea (which has seen a spike despite strict mask mandates). What about Italy? China? UK?