Same as the masks not doing very much to slow the spread, all of the hand-washing and sterilizing everything is not doing much either, yet no one wants to admit it. It seems it is just pride that is getting in the way of better ideas at this point. No one wants to admit the mistakes and move forward with a better pandemic response.
Hygiene Theater Is Still a Huge Waste of Time - The Atlantic
I mostly agree that hygiene isn't that important for this pandemic, but I don't agree that it's completely useless either. If it prevents just a few percent of cases or deaths, that's good enough. And I suspect a lot of people don't practice good hygiene anyway, and this is a good excuse to motivate them to be more hygienic and prevent the spread of other infectious diseases. Unless you're against hand washing in general, I don't see any big downside here.
CDC recommending 2 masks is tacit acknowledgement that the last year of mask wearing didn't work. If 1 mask worked really really well, then no need to recommend 2 masks.
This is just a response to the more contagious variants.
As far as respirators goes, there would probably be some benefit, but I am not sure there would be a dramatic benefit, since most people are getting the virus at home, when they are eating or drinking, or in other close social gatherings, when they are not wearing any face protection. Common people wearing masks or respirators are not well-trained in handling, so there might be some of the same problems that are occurring with regular "face-coverings".
Of course, I'm assuming that most people aren't a bunch of complete idiots. Obviously, everyone in a household would have to wear respirators whenever they're indoors outside of the household.
Reusable, elastomeric respirators are better (sometimes by a lot) than disposable N95s in almost every way. Elastomerics are better fitting than disposables. In fact, with elastomerics you can do a fit check yourself to ensure a proper seal; this is impossible to do for valveless disposables (I'm not sure about the disposable that come with valves though). Elastomerics can also use N100-equivalent filters which are better then the N95 standard used in health care. They're also more comfortable, so compliance should be better.
As for training, it's fairly simple (again, I assume most people aren't complete idiots) to do a fit check and you'll get a good fit even without doing one. Also, millions of people already have some experience with elastomerics from doing projects around the house.
Since you seem to think that there's at least some possibility for a dramatic benefit, wouldn't it be a good idea to try to find out if this is the case?
In addition, a meta study of regular masks versus N-95 masks found no difference in the spread of influenza-like-illness or respiratory illness in health care professionals. If N-95 was superior, then it should have jumped out of the data. Authors of the study say that there might have been problems with how people used the masks - which is the crux of the issue with the general public. If health care professionals cannot follow their training with PPE well enough to prevent the spread of ILI, then the general public most certainly will not.
Once again in the masks vs. n95 meta analysis, the authors mention how in lab tests the masks seem to block a lot of particles and should work, but in real world situations, they don't.
This meta analysis was actually inconclusive due to "insufficient data." Can you point out a meta that actually shows N95s don't work?
A more recent meta claims (with low certainty, however) that N95s work better than masks.
There are issues with all of these metas, however. Fit seems to be a problem but how big of a problem it actually is seems unclear. And a bigger problem is that they're looking only at disposable respirators (which are not that easy to fit) with only N95 ratings. As I've mentioned before, elastomerics are better in almost every way, including fit.
Physical distancing, face masks, and eye protection to prevent person-to-person transmission of SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19: a systematic review and meta-analysis
https://doi.org/10.1...6736(20)31142-9
Proper fit of face masks is more important than material, study suggests
https://www.eurekale...c-pfo021121.php
Edited by Florin, 11 February 2021 - 09:17 PM.