Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:at the parks I’ve been to, the older kids (maybe 5 +) all wear masks consistently, but the little ones aren’t. I’m ok with that.
Out of curiosity, why? Evidence shows.kids are perfect spreaders.
Not young kids (younger than 10). It's not clear why, but they don't seem to pass along the virus as easily as older kids and adults.
This is outdated info. Research and see - young kids get it and spread it.
.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:at the parks I’ve been to, the older kids (maybe 5 +) all wear masks consistently, but the little ones aren’t. I’m ok with that.
Out of curiosity, why? Evidence shows.kids are perfect spreaders.
Not young kids (younger than 10). It's not clear why, but they don't seem to pass along the virus as easily as older kids and adults.
This is outdated info. Research and see - young kids get it and spread it.
.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:at the parks I’ve been to, the older kids (maybe 5 +) all wear masks consistently, but the little ones aren’t. I’m ok with that.
Out of curiosity, why? Evidence shows.kids are perfect spreaders.
Not young kids (younger than 10). It's not clear why, but they don't seem to pass along the virus as easily as older kids and adults.
This is outdated info. Research and see - young kids get it and spread it.
.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nobody has masks on at our playgrounds. Kids or adults.
Why? Do you live in the area? Bc pretty much all our close -in jurisdictions actually require a mask when out of the house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What outbreaks have you heard of happening at playgrounds?
Is it zero risk? Probably not. But all the evidence shows that outdoors activities present very little, very low risk.
Some people will accept nothing less than absolute zero. Which is fine for them. But others have a risk tolerance where "very very low" is fine. You have to decide what's best for your own family.
Thanks Trump.
Outdoors + masks + 6 feet = very little risk.
Only one of the three (outdoors) is risky indeed.
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/daily-life-coping/deciding-to-go-out.html
Anonymous wrote:This is why we can’t have things, like open schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What outbreaks have you heard of happening at playgrounds?
Is it zero risk? Probably not. But all the evidence shows that outdoors activities present very little, very low risk.
Some people will accept nothing less than absolute zero. Which is fine for them. But others have a risk tolerance where "very very low" is fine. You have to decide what's best for your own family.
Thanks *****.
Outdoors + masks + 6 feet = very little risk.
Only one of the three (outdoors) is risky indeed.
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/daily-life-coping/deciding-to-go-out.html
This has nothing to do with *****. Yes, he's inept. But there's still next to zero risk for this kind of transmission. You still provided no evidence of confirmed transmission. How about one case?
Anonymous wrote:Nobody has masks on at our playgrounds. Kids or adults.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. We also go to gymnastic class indoor twice a week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:at the parks I’ve been to, the older kids (maybe 5 +) all wear masks consistently, but the little ones aren’t. I’m ok with that.
Out of curiosity, why? Evidence shows.kids are perfect spreaders.
My kid is ES, and she's not playing with the toddlers, or even really going near them. She's also old enough that she's not doing things like licking or mouthing the equipment. If the parents of toddlers and preschoolers don't want them to wear masks at the playground, that's on them; my kid is masked, at least six feet away, and we're outdoors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:at the parks I’ve been to, the older kids (maybe 5 +) all wear masks consistently, but the little ones aren’t. I’m ok with that.
Out of curiosity, why? Evidence shows.kids are perfect spreaders.
Not young kids (younger than 10). It's not clear why, but they don't seem to pass along the virus as easily as older kids and adults.
Anonymous wrote:I don't care. You do you OP. If it bothers you, don't go the park. You can't police what other people do. I wear my mask indoors but not always outdoors, my kids are little and don't ever wear masks outdoors. My husband gets tested weekly, he's our barometer!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:at the parks I’ve been to, the older kids (maybe 5 +) all wear masks consistently, but the little ones aren’t. I’m ok with that.
Out of curiosity, why? Evidence shows.kids are perfect spreaders.