riffmongous wrote: » And the longer and with less thought a person wears one the more likely a person is to still transmit, and the more people and places they are worn the more likely this becomes.
Beanybabog wrote: » No they’re paper. I got them, there wasn’t many left so I got a box before the announcement. I also got cloth masks, a lot of small shops near me are selling them for a fiver
YFlyer wrote: » Can the straps be adjusted? What type of mask was it?
leahyl wrote: » It’s a cotton mask with 2 layers, elastic loops for around the ears - the loops aren’t very big though - I think I might be able to adjust the loops to make them a bit stretchier...it was my first time wearing it so maybe they’ll stretch a bit more as time goes on.
YFlyer wrote: » You probably be better to have a few of them. Once worn and taken off, they should be washed and dried before wearing again.
ShineOn7 wrote: » Going to order a pack of one of these two in the next hourhttps://www.fishersci.ie/shop/products/disposable-particulate-respirator/p-8001321https://www.fishersci.ie/shop/products/disposable-particulate-respirator/11713363 Any thoughts on there being much of a difference between them?
alentejo wrote: » Please dispose masks in a suitable bin when finished with them. Starting to see masks as well as rubber gloves as general litter.
Wibbs wrote: » How? Unless you go around touching someone else's mask it's still reducing the exhalation of droplets. And it still never ceases to amaze me that the Irish seemingly alone in the world can't wear a mask, never mind the constant excuses thrown out for not wearing one.
riffmongous wrote: » I don't have to explain how touching a contaminated mask spread the contamination do I? How the longer and more often you change your mask the more this happens?
Wibbs wrote: » Your logic is all over the place and sounds like the usual rehash of the copypasta HSE stuff on the matter to avoid the early panic buying. Again, who is touching the mask? The already infected aren't going to get any more infected and the droplets are still contained behind the mask so much less will transfer to their hands and thence to surfaces and much less can be passed to the healthy by breathing droplets in, the non infected have a higher risk, but if they're touching the outside of the mask after touching a contaminated surface it's still protecting their airways. And all the while exhalation droplets are overall still being reduced in the air. Find me a nation with low figures that didn't mandate masks in public places. I mean properly low figures, like under a couple of hundred. Good luck with that. Greece is the only outlier, but they clamped down extremely hard on border control and lockdowns. You couldn't leave your home without certification and had to carry ID and the police arrested nearly 400 people and handed out thousands of fines(they even confiscated car number plates). Now that Greece is trying to open up again they've mandated masks(and gloves) for all workers dealing with the public and are considering widening that. Look to the countries with the very lowest figures and guess what? Masks are front and centre. As they were as far back in the 1918 pandemic, or more recently with the SARS outbreak, where researchers in the areas hit viewed mask wearing as a strongly positive protection. And yet here we are in Ireland.
riffmongous wrote: » You're someone who has voluntarily chosen to wear a mask from the very beginning.. of course you are going to be more aware of what to do than most people. Where I live there has been a requirement to wear masks in certain places for a few weeks now and you can see loads of people wearing or using them incorrectly every time you look around. You will see this in Ireland too. It might not be rocket science to put on a mask, but using one correctly over longer periods requires quite a bit of discipline, education and thought. The good thing is though that the virus numbers are now so low that it's less of an issue if people are careless and the masks will still be useful.
riffmongous wrote: » I don't live in Ireland so I don't pay any attention to what the HSE says, nothing to do with us here. What I say comes from my experience working in a CBRN unit.
sternn wrote: » I got a couple of face masks from the site www.cottonfacemasks.ie which was pretty nice. Expensive but saves getting the disposable ones.
khalessi wrote: » My first thought was Homer Simpson, he really should be your avatar
riffmongous wrote: » Would that make you Dr. Nick?
khalessi wrote: » Nah I d be Barney Forgot to say that was a joke not meant in a mean way
Seanergy wrote: » My bra mask gives makes me look a bit like Homer? Top tip people, if youve got kids who are a bit freaked out by all the masks and the whole virus thing, doing a little funny looking costume playing is a game changer.
ShineOn7 wrote: » Still looking for 3M or similar high standard FFP2 masks and links would be welcome. Thanks