Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, I plan to mask on planes from now on. Since masking, I haven't caught any of the viral travel illnesses I usually catch, so definitely masking on planes, in airports and on public transportation as much as possible.
You can do what you want, but please don’t for the same to your kids. Kids (and adults) need exposure to germs so that it kept your immune system healthy and functioning.
Unless you are immunocompromised, it is healthy to expose yourself to some germs and viruses.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, I plan to mask on planes from now on. Since masking, I haven't caught any of the viral travel illnesses I usually catch, so definitely masking on planes, in airports and on public transportation as much as possible.
Anonymous wrote:Last week returning from Spain none of our flight attendants had on masks. Mid way through the flight a passenger started throwing up. They all put on masks after that.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, I plan to mask on planes from now on. Since masking, I haven't caught any of the viral travel illnesses I usually catch, so definitely masking on planes, in airports and on public transportation as much as possible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why the need to ask? You are free to do what you like! Mask if you want, don’t if you don’t.
I know. Weird how people crowdsource their health to DCUM!
Yes, I mask on planes. Especially this time of year.
Asians have been doing it for years. They did not consult with other countries to make sure it would not look silly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hearing so many nasty, wet coughs while traveling internationally. I started maskignnagain, and I'm not even a germaphobe. I just don't want to ruin a trip with an upper respiratory infection. But it sounds so bad now. You masking up in airports and planes?
At airports and on the plane, yes, I mask. Don't care what anyone else does, I don't trust any of the public to not travel while sick or still contagious
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why the need to ask? You are free to do what you like! Mask if you want, don’t if you don’t.
I know. Weird how people crowdsource their health to DCUM!
Yes, I mask on planes. Especially this time of year.
Asians have been doing it for years. They did not consult with other countries to make sure it would not look silly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why the need to ask? You are free to do what you like! Mask if you want, don’t if you don’t.
I know. Weird how people crowdsource their health to DCUM!
Yes, I mask on planes. Especially this time of year.
Asians have been doing it for years. They did not consult with other countries to make sure it would not look silly.
Anonymous wrote:Masks do not work. They might help if you commit to not eating or drinking anything when you are in public but during the Spanish Flu it was shown to be ineffective even among people who were extremely diligent mask wearers.
“Epidemiological and Statistical Data, US Navy, 1918,” Reprinted from the Annual Report of the Surgeon General, US Navy, (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1919) 434.
Although the Surgeon General of the US Navy acknowledged that wearing masks by hospital staff was good practice, “the morbidity rate, nevertheless, was very high among those attending the sick,” and may only have prevented infection from a direct, close hit from a cough or sneeze of a patient. The protocols followed in the contagious annex of the US Naval Hospital in Annapolis, MD, were sufficient to prevent cross-contamination of “cerebro-spinal fever” (aka meningitis), diphtheria, measles, mumps, scarlet fever, and German measles. Not so with influenza. In fact, the infection rate of staff was as high in the high-protocol wards as in the improvised hospitals. In one improvised hospital at the Navy Training Station in Great Lakes, IL., the infection rate was higher among those corpsmen and volunteers who wore masks than those who did not!
https://update.lib.berkeley.edu/2020/05/23/did-masks-work-the-1918-flu-pandemic-and-the-meaning-of-layered-interventions/