I believe we're trying to protect people from us when we wear a mask, but it's hard to keep up.titan said:
Are we stopping our exhale going out; or everyone's else's exhale "coming in"?
I believe we're trying to protect people from us when we wear a mask, but it's hard to keep up.titan said:
Are we stopping our exhale going out; or everyone's else's exhale "coming in"?
Let me start with this. Anyone that tells you they definitively know that masks work or don't work at preventing the spread of COVID is full of ****. It logically makes sense that it should help, but we really don't know with regards to regular, non-medical grade masks. The primary reason to wear a mask is to prevent you from spreading to others, due to masks preventing the spread of respiratory droplets. I certainly don't wear my mask while driving, however, as that is pointless. Outside of N95s/P100s, masks do not prevent you from inhaling COVID due to not having a tight fit, and the material not being able to filter out viruses as small as COVID.titan said:Dr., I keep hearing contradictory versions --both persusaive, but can't tell which is true.Dr. Not Yet Dr. Ag said:No, obviously an emergency is still an emergency, even in COVID times. The problem early on was the messaging was too strong about staying away from the hospital, that many of our strokes, heart attacks, and surgical disasters were waiting too long to come in. But now that everyone thinks this is over, we are starting to see people come in to get their blood pressure checked again because it was too high at home, and we are seeing our frequent flyers who abuse the hospital system again, who mysteriously were absent for the 2 months prior.hunterntexas said:
If a person is truly deserving of the ER, does it matter if they are having serious medical issues that aren't COVID-19 related?
I think not. When I thought my appendix was going to burst, I wasn't that worried that I didn't have flu-like symptoms.
Elective surgeries can be postponed if the admitting hospital is nearing capacity.
Regarding non N95 or more medical special masks, of the more the generiic kind and bandana's, are we:
1) Trying to keep our own `in' on the inside side of the mask and away from others?
2) Or, we are trying to keep `outisdie' from outside our face?
Either way, I will wear the mask where others are because that is the courtesy. But which are you really trying to block when don't have the "medical" kind?
It seems very obvious to me if you have not had it, and no one has been in your car at all, you wouldn't need to wear it driving.And so forth.
But to be clear, as this goes back and forth on many threads and news --- asking only ONE thing.
Are we stopping our exhale going out; or everyone's else's exhale "coming in"?
Excellent, thanks. Very clear answer, and fitting the more persuasive side of the two possible choices.Dr. Not Yet Dr. Ag said:Let me start with this. Anyone that tells you they definitively know that masks work or don't work at preventing the spread of COVID is full of ****. It logically makes sense that it should help, but we really don't know with regards to regular, non-medical grade masks. The primary reason to wear a mask is to prevent you from spreading to others, due to masks preventing the spread of respiratory droplets. I certainly don't wear my mask while driving, however, as that is pointless. Outside of N95s/P100s, masks do not prevent you from inhaling COVID due to not having a tight fit, and the material not being able to filter out viruses as small as COVID.titan said:Dr., I keep hearing contradictory versions --both persusaive, but can't tell which is true.Dr. Not Yet Dr. Ag said:No, obviously an emergency is still an emergency, even in COVID times. The problem early on was the messaging was too strong about staying away from the hospital, that many of our strokes, heart attacks, and surgical disasters were waiting too long to come in. But now that everyone thinks this is over, we are starting to see people come in to get their blood pressure checked again because it was too high at home, and we are seeing our frequent flyers who abuse the hospital system again, who mysteriously were absent for the 2 months prior.hunterntexas said:
If a person is truly deserving of the ER, does it matter if they are having serious medical issues that aren't COVID-19 related?
I think not. When I thought my appendix was going to burst, I wasn't that worried that I didn't have flu-like symptoms.
Elective surgeries can be postponed if the admitting hospital is nearing capacity.
Regarding non N95 or more medical special masks, of the more the generiic kind and bandana's, are we:
1) Trying to keep our own `in' on the inside side of the mask and away from others?
2) Or, we are trying to keep `outisdie' from outside our face?
Either way, I will wear the mask where others are because that is the courtesy. But which are you really trying to block when don't have the "medical" kind?
It seems very obvious to me if you have not had it, and no one has been in your car at all, you wouldn't need to wear it driving.And so forth.
But to be clear, as this goes back and forth on many threads and news --- asking only ONE thing.
Are we stopping our exhale going out; or everyone's else's exhale "coming in"?
bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb said:
I generally don't have people constantly calling me a troll for talking about statistics and graphs in real life.
I get called sweetheart frequently by boomers in a professional setting, are you saying it's condescending or patronizing? I didn't realize I should be so offended. Feminists argue the same thing... but I'm not a feminist, and prescribe the label of sweetheart equally to both sexes because I am also not a sexist.
That's exactly what I got out of that and sortof already believed. Since I can't be sure if have it (as sure as can be don't) the courtesy thing is when others are wearing them, not to just defeat what they are trying to do.Bingo Bango Bongo said:
Masks help contain droplet transmission. Are they foolproof? No. Is it important that people use them correctly to help improve their effectiveness (i.e. sanitize your hands before putting on and taking off, try to minimize face-touching)? Yes. But people clinging to some thought that they absolutely don't work at all is ridiculous. They are a tool that can provide some help and I see it as a basic courtesy right now.
titan said:That's exactly what I got out of that and sortof already believed. Since I can't be sure if have it (as sure as can be don't) the courtesy thing is when others are wearing them, not to just defeat what they are trying to do.Bingo Bango Bongo said:
Masks help contain droplet transmission. Are they foolproof? No. Is it important that people use them correctly to help improve their effectiveness (i.e. sanitize your hands before putting on and taking off, try to minimize face-touching)? Yes. But people clinging to some thought that they absolutely don't work at all is ridiculous. They are a tool that can provide some help and I see it as a basic courtesy right now.
If none are, then I can just judge what I think the risk level is. It confirmed what I thought that its for others, not yourself, and so when alone, its academic. Especially in locations where you know with certain who or has or hasn't been there. But I know some people wearing them in their houses.
I guess they could do that thing but they keep talking about it. I just wanted to know which thing is trying to prevent.SociallyConditionedAg said:titan said:That's exactly what I got out of that and sortof already believed. Since I can't be sure if have it (as sure as can be don't) the courtesy thing is when others are wearing them, not to just defeat what they are trying to do.Bingo Bango Bongo said:
Masks help contain droplet transmission. Are they foolproof? No. Is it important that people use them correctly to help improve their effectiveness (i.e. sanitize your hands before putting on and taking off, try to minimize face-touching)? Yes. But people clinging to some thought that they absolutely don't work at all is ridiculous. They are a tool that can provide some help and I see it as a basic courtesy right now.
If none are, then I can just judge what I think the risk level is. It confirmed what I thought that its for others, not yourself, and so when alone, its academic. Especially in locations where you know with certain who or has or hasn't been there. But I know some people wearing them in their houses.
Wouldn't the courteous thing be to just shut your mouth and make your choice either way without expecting someone else to accommodate you?
bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb said:
I'm just going to let the doctor on this board speak instead and tap out.
There is noise in that datapoint too.Bluecat_Aggie94 said:
Deaths is the only statistic that matters. There is so much noise in every other data point.
nortex97 said:
We've vastly increased testing in Texas and the positive rate has gradually gone from 5 to 10 percent. A lot of those are false positives though now as the cheap/not-really-fda-cleared tests have become much more prevalent. In truth anything at/around 10 or 12 percent isn't a reason to panic. We also had some of the largest marches/protests/stupidity around whatever BLM/Antifa said (though relatively less looting than elsewhere).
Nationally, the positive rate of those taking the test has not jumped much (still around 5). In Louisiana, it's dropped to 3 percent, and in Oklahoma, where our national press has tried to convince people the entire state is going to die next month, it's around 7. Frankly, the positive rate of tests taken is what matters, not 'total cases' etc.
The Italians have about had it with the alarmists/coronabros, and think it might just go away;Quote:
Zangrillo said some experts were too alarmist about the prospect of a second wave of infections and politicians needed to take into account the new reality.
"We've got to get back to being a normal country," he said. "Someone has to take responsibility for terrorizing the country."
The government urged caution, saying it was far too soon to claim victory.
"Pending scientific evidence to support the thesis that the virus has disappeared ... I would invite those who say they are sure of it not to confuse Italians," Sandra Zampa, an undersecretary at the health ministry, said in a statement."The strength the virus had two months ago is not the same strength it has today," said Matteo Bassetti, head of the infectious diseases clinic at the San Martino hospital in the city of Genoa.
"It is clear that today the COVID-19 disease is different."
Dr. Not Yet Dr. Ag said:
Let me start with this. Anyone that tells you they definitively know that masks work or don't work at preventing the spread of COVID is full of ****. It logically makes sense that it should help, but we really don't know with regards to regular, non-medical grade masks. The primary reason to wear a mask is to prevent you from spreading to others, due to masks preventing the spread of respiratory droplets. I certainly don't wear my mask while driving, however, as that is pointless. Outside of N95s/P100s, masks do not prevent you from inhaling COVID due to not having a tight fit, and the material not being able to filter out viruses as small as COVID.
EXPONENTIAL!!!!bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb said:
Not yet
rangerdanger said:Dr. Not Yet Dr. Ag said:
Let me start with this. Anyone that tells you they definitively know that masks work or don't work at preventing the spread of COVID is full of ****. It logically makes sense that it should help, but we really don't know with regards to regular, non-medical grade masks. The primary reason to wear a mask is to prevent you from spreading to others, due to masks preventing the spread of respiratory droplets. I certainly don't wear my mask while driving, however, as that is pointless. Outside of N95s/P100s, masks do not prevent you from inhaling COVID due to not having a tight fit, and the material not being able to filter out viruses as small as COVID.
This is what bothers me about the mask narrative. When someone asks me why I wear one, I say it's for their benefit, not mine. Some A&M logo fabric from JoAnns is not going to protect me from this thing. Might save the 70 year old cashier at Kroger trying to supplement her social security check though.
ApachePilot said:
Got tested today. Positive IgG. So I had it prior. I had a chest cold (I thought) in January. It was way less painful than the flu.
I got zero medical treatment. Never missed work. I'm 47.
bmks270 said:ApachePilot said:
Got tested today. Positive IgG. So I had it prior. I had a chest cold (I thought) in January. It was way less painful than the flu.
I got zero medical treatment. Never missed work. I'm 47.
So you have the antibodies? But never got sick?
BigRobSA said:rangerdanger said:Dr. Not Yet Dr. Ag said:
Let me start with this. Anyone that tells you they definitively know that masks work or don't work at preventing the spread of COVID is full of ****. It logically makes sense that it should help, but we really don't know with regards to regular, non-medical grade masks. The primary reason to wear a mask is to prevent you from spreading to others, due to masks preventing the spread of respiratory droplets. I certainly don't wear my mask while driving, however, as that is pointless. Outside of N95s/P100s, masks do not prevent you from inhaling COVID due to not having a tight fit, and the material not being able to filter out viruses as small as COVID.
This is what bothers me about the mask narrative. When someone asks me why I wear one, I say it's for their benefit, not mine. Some A&M logo fabric from JoAnns is not going to protect me from this thing. Might save the 70 year old cashier at Kroger trying to supplement her social security check though.
Think about that...it can't protect you (in) but it can protect them from you (out).
Laughable, at best. It's cloth....porous equally in and out.
BigRobSA said:rangerdanger said:Dr. Not Yet Dr. Ag said:
Let me start with this. Anyone that tells you they definitively know that masks work or don't work at preventing the spread of COVID is full of ****. It logically makes sense that it should help, but we really don't know with regards to regular, non-medical grade masks. The primary reason to wear a mask is to prevent you from spreading to others, due to masks preventing the spread of respiratory droplets. I certainly don't wear my mask while driving, however, as that is pointless. Outside of N95s/P100s, masks do not prevent you from inhaling COVID due to not having a tight fit, and the material not being able to filter out viruses as small as COVID.
This is what bothers me about the mask narrative. When someone asks me why I wear one, I say it's for their benefit, not mine. Some A&M logo fabric from JoAnns is not going to protect me from this thing. Might save the 70 year old cashier at Kroger trying to supplement her social security check though.
Think about that...it can't protect you (in) but it can protect them from you (out).
Laughable, at best. It's cloth....porous equally in and out.
bmks270 said:ApachePilot said:
Got tested today. Positive IgG. So I had it prior. I had a chest cold (I thought) in January. It was way less painful than the flu.
I got zero medical treatment. Never missed work. I'm 47.
So you have the antibodies? But never got sick?
bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb said:
Not yet