What's new

Whole face Burqa's can reduce the spread of Corona Virus

What about men then?
why not the men ?
Most men do industrial work. May be?

Maybe like how the Touareg men wear :

9a030f7875a9193c148ac21240c5c120.jpg


Or maybe like this from Dune ?? :D

71RnKEOP8gL.jpg


chinese banned veil for women and now their public is forced to hide face with masks ,it seems nature takes revenge for injustice and violation of human rights and depriving Muslims from wearing dress of their choice for preservation of religious values when all other religion followers are allowed to wear dress of their choice and practice their values

Free education and free medical system are a human right. The burqa is not.

How about when the MERS disease affected some people from Saudia some years ago ?? Surely the Saudia government must have done some injustice.

men should wear masks but 50 percent population is of women and if they wear veil demand of mask will reduce to 50 percent and easily available for males without shortage and price hike

Why should price hike be there in the first place ?? Why should governments not punish those shop keepers who sell at hiked prices ??
 
. .
corona virus has spread much than any virus in this century and mers is nothing infront of this virus
Maybe like how the Touareg men wear :

9a030f7875a9193c148ac21240c5c120.jpg


Or maybe like this from Dune ?? :D

71RnKEOP8gL.jpg




Free education and free medical system are a human right. The burqa is not.

How about when the MERS disease affected some people from Saudia some years ago ?? Surely the Saudia government must have done some injustice.



Why should price hike be there in the first place ?? Why should governments not punish those shop keepers who sell at hiked prices ??
 
.
:lol:


Most men do industrial work. May be?
So they are immune to corona?

men should wear masks but 50 percent population is of women and if they wear veil demand of mask will reduce to 50 percent and easily available for males without shortage and price hike
This is the most creative excuse for the oppression of women, right after saudi clerics why women shouldnt drive cars, gotta give you that.:enjoy:
 
.
corona virus has spread much than any virus in this century and mers is nothing infront of this virus

I agree but I was responding to your theory about punishment by Nature.
 
. . . .
No it won't. It might filter some dust particles but not bacteria or viruses. Medical masks have special membranes which can reduce if not completely filter out viruses.
Even medical professionals with the best face masks have been infected....probably because the accidentally touch the outside part of the mask with their gloves off. Studies have shown any descent face cover can reduce the transmission of flu (it blocks mucus and saliva particles). Covid 19 should be similar. Is it lab grade............no, but it may still be good enough to help reduce transmission.

That was funny.

Overall, the irony of the situation would be quite beautiful if French females were forced to wear burkhas.

The irony is huge. Many traditional islamic practices help reduce the spread of various diseases...halal foods, ban on extra marital sex, washing 5 times a day...whole face burqas may be one as well.
 
Last edited:
. .
Maybe like a Darth Vader breathing apparatus..
 
. .
Breaking: Face coverings to be mandatory in all public spaces across the Czech Republic as of midnight
The government is making it mandatory to wear face coverings in public, more masks should arrive from China and VIetnam soon.
Raymond Johnston
Tip: Visit Expats.cz Health for more health & wellness resources in Prague & the Czech Republic!

All people will need to wear a protective face covering when outside their residences, in both interior and exterior public spaces, effective midnight March 18. This was decided at an extraordinary government meeting and applies nationwide. The measure is meant to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus.

This means that people will need a face mask or similar covering on the street and in parks, as well as in shops, government offices, and other public places.

The government also reserved the hours between 10 am and noon for people over 65 years of age to shop in stores. The age group is most susceptible to health risks from the virus. Setting aside a special time makes it less likely that the elderly will come in contact with younger people who have been in contact with large groups at work and other places.

Also read: Czech healthcare lacks up to one million respirators, says Health Minister
There is an acute shortage of hospital masks and respirators. Home made masks, scarfs, bandanas, or any other mask that covers the nose and mouth will satisfy the requirement. Cotton is recommended. T-shirts, for example, can be cut and folded into a mask.

This follows quickly after Prague City Hall announced that face coverings would be required in all indoor spaces such as shops and offices, and set a fine of up to 20,000 CZK for violations. That fine remains in effect in Prague. The Czech government did not specify a fine for violating the new national requirement.

Deputy Prime Minister and Interior Minister Jan Hamáček (ČSSD) previously said that people would be obliged to wear face masks as soon as large shipments arrived and were distributed.

A large Ukrainian An-124 Ruslan aircraft with 30 million face masks, 6 million respirators, and 250,000 pieces of protective gear from China is expected March 22. The government is also expecting 10 million face masks from Vietnam, with the first 1 million arriving March 23. Hamáček added that 2.5 million respirators should be delivered to the Czech Republic by March 20.


“Without exception, we must protect ourselves and our surroundings! The government has just approved the duty to have the mouth and nose covered at public places as of midnight,” Vojtěch said over Twitter.

Prague is also acquiring respirators, masks and protective outfits from China and has already received 150,000 rapid coronavirus testers from Shenzhen.

https://news.expats.cz/health-medic...ces-across-the-czech-republic-as-of-midnight/
 
. .
Asia may have been right about coronavirus and face masks, and the rest of the world is coming around

Hong Kong (CNN)In the coming weeks, if they have not already, your government is likely to begin advising you to wear a face mask to protect against coronavirus.

For those living in Asia, such announcements will be a vindication of a tactic that has been adopted across much of the region since the beginning of the crisis and appears to have been borne out by lower rates of infection and faster containment of outbreaks.
In other parts of the world, this message may be confusing, coming after weeks of public health authorities, politicians and media figures confidently claiming masks do not help and urging people instead to focus on washing their hands and maintaining social distancing.
The tone of such claims ranged from condescending to frustrated, with the US Surgeon General Jerome Adams tweeting in late February -- in all caps -- "STOP BUYING MASKS!"


"They are NOT effective in preventing general public from catching #Coronavirus, but if healthcare providers can't get them to care for sick patients, it puts them and our communities at risk," he added, in a post that has since been retweeted over 43,000 times.
That same week, Robert Redfield, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), appeared before lawmakers. Asked if people should wear masks, he had a straightforward answer: "No."
Now he's not so sure. On Monday, Redfield said told NPR that the CDC was reviewing its guidelines and may recommend general mask use to guard against community infection. It's likely only a matter of time before other mask holdouts, most prominently the World Health Organization (WHO), follow suit.

Pivot to protection

Writing last month, Adrien Burch, an expert in microbiology at the University of California, Berkeley, noted that "despite hearing that face masks 'don't work,' you probably haven't seen any strong evidence to support that claim. That's because it doesn't exist."
In fact, there is evidence of the exact opposite: that masks help prevent viral infections like the current pandemic.

Burch pointed to a Cochrane Review -- a systemic analysis of published studies on a given topic -- which found strong evidence during the 2003 SARS epidemic in support of wearing masks. One study of community transmission in Beijing found that "consistently wearing a mask in public was associated with a 70% reduction in the risk of catching SARS."

SARS, like Covid-19, is a respiratory illnesses caused by the same family of viruses called coronavirus.
While SARS spread around the world, the worst of the epidemic was focused in Asia, particularly mainland China and Hong Kong. The legacy of this experience could be seen early on in the current pandemic, as news of a virus spreading led people across the region to don face masks to protect themselves.
From the beginning, Hong Kong and many other Asian governments have recommended people wear masks in public, whether they are showing virus symptoms or not.

Despite eye-rolling in some parts of the Western press, and talk of Asia's "obsession" with face masks, the tactic appears to have contributed in helping to stem the outbreak.

Taiwan, South Korea and mainland China, all places with widespread mask use, have seen greater success in preventing major outbreaks or reigning them in once they begin than in Europe and North America where masks are either not used or hard to come by.

Speaking to CNN, Ivan Hung, an infectious diseases specialist at the Hong Kong University School of Medicine, said that "if you look at the data in Hong Kong, wearing a mask is probably the most important thing in terms of infection control."

"And it not only brings down the cases of coronaviruses, it also brings down the influenza," he said. "In fact, this is now the influenza season, and we hardly see any influenza cases. And that is because the masks actually protected not only against coronaviruses but also against the influenza viruses as well."

At the beginning of March, Hong Kong had only around 150 cases of the virus, despite being on the frontlines of the pandemic since it began and not instituting many of the more draconian population controls seen elsewhere. The city has only seen a spike recently after people began returning to the city from Europe and the US.

"Based on the research, face masks are much more likely to help than to hurt," according to Burch. "Even if it's just a homemade cloth mask, if you wear it correctly and avoid touching it, the science suggests that it won't hurt you and will most likely reduce your exposure to the virus."

Heightened contradictions
In its guidance on the coronavirus, the CDC notes that it spreads primarily "through respiratory droplets produced when an infected person coughs or sneeze," which "can land in the mouths or noses of people who are nearby or possibly be inhaled into the lungs."
The agency recommends that people who are sick wear a face mask or otherwise attempt "to cover your coughs and sneezes," while those caring for them should also wear a face mask whenever they are in the same room.
Yet, in the same advice, the CDC said that non-symptomatic "do not need" to wear face masks, adding that they "may be in short supply and they should be saved for caregivers."
And this is what has been so frustrating and confusing for many people, particularly those who advocate for wearing face masks as a precaution. The CDC, along with the WHO and several other public health bodies and experts, has been simultaneously claiming that masks do not offer protection in ordinary circumstances, while stating they are necessary for health workers and caregivers.
This conflicting advice helped create confusion and no small amount of hostility towards officials who people felt were lying to them and putting them at risk. There were numerous replies to Adams' tweet about masks in February asking "why are masks good for healthcare workers but not for the public?"
Writing last month in the New York Times, Zeynep Tufekci, a professor of information science, said that "to help manage the shortage, the authorities sent a message that made them untrustworthy."
"Providing top-down guidance with such obvious contradictions backfires exactly because lack of trust is what fuels hoarding and misinformation," she said, adding that if officials were concerned about shortages, they should have stated this outright, and asked people to donate masks they had bought to hospitals, not claimed they were ineffective in the first place.

"When people feel as though they may not be getting the full truth from the authorities, snake-oil sellers and price gougers have an easier time."

Masks work
Trying to avoid mask shortages for healthcare workers appears to have been the main priority of those arguing against widespread their widespread use. But while the motivation behind this may have been good, such advice may have actually helped spread the virus, thus adding to the number of patients overwhelming hospitals.
One of the reasons the CDC's Redfield gave for potentially changing the guidance on masks is that the coronavirus can be spread when people are asymptomatic, and therefore having everyone covering their faces -- as has been the norm in Hong Kong and other parts of Asia since January -- could help rein in transmission.

That the virus is spread before people feel sick is not news, however. It's been widely supposed since the first weeks of the outbreak, and evidence has only grown stronger in recent months.
And even if there was not asymptomatic transmission, universal or near universal mask wearing has its uses. As others have noted, instructing only the sick to wear masks is essentially asking people to put a sign on themselves inviting fear and hostility, whereas if everyone wears a mask when outside, the sick are more likely to do so, thus protecting people around them.

The lack of masks and other protective equipment in hospitals across the US and other countries should be remedied as fast as possible. But these shortages were caused by policy failures and supply chain issues, not a sudden run on 75 cent paper masks by concerned members of the public.

As the evidence increasingly comes round in favor of masks, we must ask how many infections might have been avoided if in January, instead of saying masks wouldn't help, officials and the media had instead lobbied for factories to ramp up domestic production, provided guidance on how to make masks at home, and asked other countries to donate surplus materials?

https://www.cnn.com/2020/04/01/asia/coronavirus-mask-messaging-intl-hnk/index.html
 
.

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Country Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom