Anonymous wrote:NYT article by reporter who was in China duringSARS
Wash your hands
Wash your hands
Avoid crowded places
Wear mask travel (?)
If sick STAY home don’t go to work and spread
Child sick no school
Wash hands
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, but I bought a case of Lysol wipes this weekend. DH took 5 to his school. I took 5 to mine. DD took 7 to hers (One per classroom).
I also gave DD a bottle of hand sanitizer.
So you and your husband are teachers?
We are a two-teacher HH, and this never crossed our minds.
Yes, we are. We both have some health issues so we’re pretty vigilant about cleaning our classrooms and encouraging student hygiene. Hard to do when the bathrooms don’t have liquid soap, warm water, or paper towels.
What MCPS schools do not have warm water, soap or paper towels?
Our MCPS MS runs out of toilet paper and paper towels regularly!
One way masks could stop you getting the flu is by stopping your hand touching your mouth or nose. Aside from inhaling droplets, you can also get the flu from touching anything with the flu virus on it—the armrests on public transport, say—and then touching your face. And people touch their faces a lot without even realising it. A study from New South Wales found that people touch their faces about 23 times an hour.
There's one weak point in this plan: you can also get the flu from touching your eye with your contaminated hand. And even to stop the hand to mouth/nose transmission, you'd have to wear a mask 24/7, regularly disposing of the old ones while trying to avoid touching your face. And wearing masks can feel unpleasant and make communication difficult. So they're not very practical. One study found that only 21% of people are able to keep masks on for the recommended time.
No strong evidence
A study that is often cited as evidence that surgical masks work is a randomised trial from 2009 that compared surgical masks with a specialist mask called an N95 respirator—a mask that fits snugly and filters at least 95% of very small (0.3 micron) particles.
The study, published in JAMA, found that surgical masks were as effective as N95 respirators at preventing the flu, which is to say, not all that effective because, of the 446 nurses who took part in this study, nearly one in four (24%) in the surgical mask group still got the flu as did 23% of those who wore the N95 respirator. And, because both groups wore masks, it's impossible to say how they would have fared compared with not wearing a mask at all.
Basically, there is no strong evidence to support well people wearing surgical masks in public. Or as the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention put it: "No recommendation can be made at this time for mask use in the community by asymptomatic persons, including those at high risk for complications, to prevent exposure to influenza viruses."
The best thing you can do to stop getting the flu is to regularly wash your hands, and try to avoid touching your face.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Microbiologist here.
No, there is no reason to walk around with masks in the USA right now, except perhaps in international airports and on board international-bound airplanes.
However, thinking about this for future pandemics, if your child needs to go to school wearing a mask, it means the school system should consider closing temporarily. Hopefully we will never have that scenario here, but this is one of the measures epidemiologists need to plan for.
Apparently there is no legal "need" for the schools to shutdown. The schools must consider many factors before making such a decision.
However each individuals can choose to do what they feel like, as long as it does not interfere with others. I personally agree that under the current situation, the risk is rather low. But I do not see a problem if others would like to (ask their kids to) wear masks.
Not sure why you're talking about a legal need. If there is an epidemic in the USA, the CDC will make recommendations, which will be echoed by all federal and state governments. Closures will happen if they are recommended.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Microbiologist here.
No, there is no reason to walk around with masks in the USA right now, except perhaps in international airports and on board international-bound airplanes.
However, thinking about this for future pandemics, if your child needs to go to school wearing a mask, it means the school system should consider closing temporarily. Hopefully we will never have that scenario here, but this is one of the measures epidemiologists need to plan for.
Apparently there is no legal "need" for the schools to shutdown. The schools must consider many factors before making such a decision.
However each individuals can choose to do what they feel like, as long as it does not interfere with others. I personally agree that under the current situation, the risk is rather low. But I do not see a problem if others would like to (ask their kids to) wear masks.
Anonymous wrote:
Microbiologist here.
No, there is no reason to walk around with masks in the USA right now, except perhaps in international airports and on board international-bound airplanes.
However, thinking about this for future pandemics, if your child needs to go to school wearing a mask, it means the school system should consider closing temporarily. Hopefully we will never have that scenario here, but this is one of the measures epidemiologists need to plan for.
Anonymous wrote:If it gets to the point people should be doing this, school should be cancelled.
Anonymous wrote:No mask.
And actually, you can get coronovirus through eye droplets anyway. Mask won’t help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, but I bought a case of Lysol wipes this weekend. DH took 5 to his school. I took 5 to mine. DD took 7 to hers (One per classroom).
I also gave DD a bottle of hand sanitizer.
So you and your husband are teachers?
We are a two-teacher HH, and this never crossed our minds.
Yes, we are. We both have some health issues so we’re pretty vigilant about cleaning our classrooms and encouraging student hygiene. Hard to do when the bathrooms don’t have liquid soap, warm water, or paper towels.
What MCPS schools do not have warm water, soap or paper towels?