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Ne pas porter de masque pour se protéger du coronavirus est une «grande erreur»

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Posté(é)

C’est ça. Je n’arrive pas à croire que le gouvernement persiste là dessus après l’erreur du début avec l’OMS.

Encore une grave erreur. 

Posté(é)

il serais temps de mettre les décisions entre les mains de gens compétents, c'est à dire  des gens qui ne soit pas des politiques 

Posté(é)
Il y a 5 heures, gepeliste62 a dit :

il serais temps de mettre les décisions entre les mains de gens compétents, c'est à dire  des gens qui ne soit pas des politiques 

Ou, pour le dire autrement, à défaut de masques, la gestion de la crise, elle, est une belle mascarade !😠😤👹

Posté(é)
  • Auteur

Visualisation de l'émission d'aérosols produits par une toux ou un éternuement : (il faudrait tester la même chose avec différents types de masques, pros ou "alternatifs")

 

https://edition.cnn.com/videos/health/2020/04/10/sneeze-cough-animations-coronavirus-pandemic-eg-orig.cnn

 

On voit que ces aérosols vont loin, plusieurs mètres (8 selon la video), mais ça dépend du vent, et restent assez longtemps dans l'air (plusieurs minutes).

 

Posté(é)
  • Auteur

Les chercheurs n'ont aucune idée de l'efficacité des masques bricolés à la maison  (sur CNN, il y a 5h30) :

 

 

We don't know how effective homemade masks are, researchers warn

From CNN's Jen Christensen

 

The effectiveness of homemade masks is "not possible to assess" at this time, said the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine in a letter to the White House on Wednesday.

The National Academies offered guidance about the country’s recommendation that people wear homemade masks to protect from the spread of coronavirus when an individual is asymptomatic or pre-symptomatic.

How well masks work depend on how they are made, the quality of production, and on how well the person follows other precautionary behaviors, said the letter.

How coronavirus spreads: Researchers believe Covid-19 primarily spreads via large droplets, such as when someone coughs or sneezes. But it is also believed to spread via invisible droplets, as small as 5 microns – and even smaller bioaerosol particles – that can be expelled when an infected person breathes.

How much these tiny particles can spread the disease is unknown, the letter says.

Studies on the effectiveness of homemade masks are limited: One unpublished study showed that thicker masks worked better, but one mask that was tested was so thick it would “cause great discomfort” and may cause the wearer to pass out.

There were no studies on how well homemade masks fit, the letter said. An ill-fitting mask may leak. And if a person sweats, the moisture could trap the virus and become a potential contamination source. 

Another experiment looking at masks made from sweatshirts, t-shirts, towels, scarves and cloth masks found that they reduced some low-level protection against nanoparticles from someone breathing, but not from aerosolized infection.

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