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by jbob2000
2295 days ago
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Reading training materials does not mean that you are trained. Who is going to slap your hand away from your face when you reach inside your mask to scratch an itch? What if you wash your hands, take of your mask, and then touch the door handle you touched with your dirty hands? I can come up with these scenarios all day. The point I'm making is that the real way to protect yourself is to wash your hands. That's it. The mask does nothing unless you're literally being coughed on by someone who is infected. |
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These same caveats apply to medical workers, who occasionally get sick while treating cases. Risk reduction isn't risk elimination but that doesn't make it pointless.
>The point I'm making is that the real way to protect yourself is to wash your hands.
You could also come up with scenarios where someone who was insufficiently trained would fail to protect themselves with hand washing. Here are some:
- Insufficient washing time.
- Touching handle before and after.
- Only using water.
No measure is perfect, and I think we can all agree that a measure with a less-than-100% chance of working (whether hand-washing or mask wearing) is better than nothing.