Although the jury's still out regarding the tiny airborne particles of COVID-19 lingering in the air, I'm sure we all agree that we shouldn't take chances when it comes to working without face masks. There are none in our DO and the staff there can't find any place that sells them; they're even sold out online.POSTMAN wrote:Will Royal Mail be providing face masks?
Where we have identified specific roles for whom observing the 2m physical distancing is at times difficult masks are being provided. However, in those cases the 2m physical distancing must be observed when possible and hand hygiene rules including not touching the mouth, nose and eyes or before eating must continue to be observed.
Masks are on order and will be made available for those employees that wish to use them from their managers. The World Health Organization guidance on when to use a mask says states that it is only beneficial to stop the spread of the virus for:
Coronavirus disease advice for the public: When and how to use masks:-
- People who are ill, coughing and sneezing to reduce them from spreading the virus to others.
People who are caring for, or in close contact with someone who is infected. People who are healthy only need to wear a mask if they are taking care of a person with suspected 2019-nCoV infection.Further information on the use of face masks can be found on the WHO website.
- • If you are healthy, you only need to wear a mask if you are taking care of a person with suspected coronavirus infection.
• Wear a mask if you are coughing or sneezing.
• Masks are effective only when used in combination with frequent hand-cleaning with alcohol-based hand rub or soap and water.
• If you wear a mask, then you must know how to use it and dispose of it properly.
People often touch masks frequently adjusting them and ‘checking’ them and risk potentially picking up the virus from the mask onto their hands when they remove it. The primary preventative guidance is hand hygiene supported by the 2m social physical distancing.
So the sooner the masks that are ordered arrive to our office, the safer we'll be.
South China Morning Post (April 2, 2020): Is Airborne Coronavirus Transmission Possible? The WHO Urges Caution
The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine: Rapid Expert Consultation on the Possibility of Bioaerosol Spread of SARS-CoV-2 for the COVID-19 Pandemic (April 1, 2020)Scientists are exploring the possibility that the coronavirus that causes Covid-19 could be spread through the air over a much wider area than via coughs and sneezes, but the World Health Organization has urged caution saying the available evidence has yet to support this.
“Airborne transmissions” are defined as tiny aerosol droplets – smaller than 5 micrometers in diameter – that can linger in the air for hours.
They can also spread the disease much further than the 2 meters (6 feet) covered by the respiratory droplets that are currently seen as the primary means of spreading the disease. Aerosols can also cause more damage when inhaled because they travel further into the lungs.
Hanan Balkhy, assistant director general for antimicrobial resistance at the WHO told US National Public Radio on Monday that unlike cases where the virus has been spread through coughs and sneezes “if we were to have airborne transmission, we would see cases with no contact before getting ill with that disease. That’s just one example. And we are not seeing that”.
But Anthony Fauci, the director of the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, has said he could not rule out the possibility and recent research has also found “limited evidence that some potential for airborne transmission exists”.