Reply
Honored Contributor
Posts: 19,819
Registered: ‎03-13-2010

Re: Wearing masks outside

[ Edited ]

I have not been out much at all lately, only to food store, but I am seeing more people wearing gloves and quite a few wearing masks.  I am surprised that cashiers for the most part don't seem to be wearing gloves. Also, I see none of these plexiglass things that I read are being installed in stores, nor tapes or signs for social distancing.  The only place I have seen that so far was Big Lots.  Oh, forgot to say --- I took a walk and did not see many people but I would say that perhaps 3 or 4 had on masks.  

"A day without sunshine is like, you know, night." - Steve Martin
Honored Contributor
Posts: 8,750
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

"As the new coronavirus COVID-19 spreads in the U.S., people who are well want to stay that way. But since no vaccines are currently available, the strongest weapons Americans have are basic preventive measures like hand-washing and sanitizing surfaces, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

The simplicity of those recommendations is likely unsettling to people anxious to do more to protect themselves, so it’s no surprise that face masks are in short supply—despite the CDC specifically not recommending them for healthy people trying to protect against COVID-19. “It seems kind of intuitively obvious that if you put something—whether it’s a scarf or a mask—in front of your nose and mouth, that will filter out some of these viruses that are floating around out there,” says Dr. William Schaffner, professor of medicine in the division of infectious diseases at Vanderbilt University. The only problem: that’s not effective against respiratory illnesses like the flu and COVID-19. If it were, “the CDC would have recommended it years ago,” he says. “It doesn’t, because it makes science-based recommendations.

Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 7,836
Registered: ‎03-10-2010

@Boehm Collector wrote:

"As the new coronavirus COVID-19 spreads in the U.S., people who are well want to stay that way. But since no vaccines are currently available, the strongest weapons Americans have are basic preventive measures like hand-washing and sanitizing surfaces, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

The simplicity of those recommendations is likely unsettling to people anxious to do more to protect themselves, so it’s no surprise that face masks are in short supply—despite the CDC specifically not recommending them for healthy people trying to protect against COVID-19. “It seems kind of intuitively obvious that if you put something—whether it’s a scarf or a mask—in front of your nose and mouth, that will filter out some of these viruses that are floating around out there,” says Dr. William Schaffner, professor of medicine in the division of infectious diseases at Vanderbilt University. The only problem: that’s not effective against respiratory illnesses like the flu and COVID-19. If it were, “the CDC would have recommended it years ago,” he says. “It doesn’t, because it makes science-based recommendations.


@Boehm Collector 

Twenty hearts for this post.💕

"Breathe in, breathe out, move on." Jimmy Buffett
Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 5,190
Registered: ‎01-13-2012

THe masks that you see people outside wearing are most likely NOT the masks that hospital workers need right now.  My daughter is an ICU nurse.  The shortage of the standard hospital masks that actually form a seal is real.