←back to thread

265 points ajaviaad | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
Show context
chvid ◴[] No.22760237[source]
I thought here in the west that it was well-established that temperature checks and mask do not work against the corona?!
replies(8): >>22760273 #>>22760292 #>>22760320 #>>22760373 #>>22760375 #>>22760387 #>>22760433 #>>22761127 #
amiga_500 ◴[] No.22760320[source]
I have a hard time believing that everyone wearing a mask when interacting doesn't inhibit a disease transmitted via vapor in our breath.
replies(2): >>22760484 #>>22761901 #
btilly ◴[] No.22760484[source]
There is actually a debate about this.

A bad mask (eg a bandanna) means less virus gets out, but it is more likely to get out in the form of a fine aerosol that hangs in the air for hours. On the opposite end it is a reminder not to touch your face (prevents transmission from your hands) but won't stop you from breathing in an aerosol.

Likely still a net win, but kinda a hard thing to do good research on.

There is no doubt that masks that are designed to block things the size of viruses help. Just issues about who is the highest priority to get them when they are in short supply.

replies(4): >>22760549 #>>22760639 #>>22760714 #>>22760720 #
erik ◴[] No.22760639{3}[source]
> A bad mask (eg a bandanna) means less virus gets out, but it is more likely to get out in the form of a fine aerosol

Do you have a reference for this? I've only ever heard of aerosolization primarily being a concern around people on breathing assistance equipment.

replies(1): >>22761770 #
1. btilly ◴[] No.22761770{4}[source]
I can't find the source I saw it in, but the idea is this. If you cough, large droplets coat the inside of the cloth, and then are forced through the weave of the cloth and come out as small droplets. The smaller the droplet, the better it hangs out in the air.