I realize that I should have made the masks portion of
yesterday's wander its own post. What was supposed to
be a casual collection of odd impressions of current events and
what I'm up to turned into a mildly angry rant. That's just how
things work in the back of my head sometimes.
Anyway. I ran into some links this morning that are worth
mentioning. The first one is a must-read: "
Aerosols, Droplets, and Airborne Spread." It
didn't answer all of my questions, but it answered a lot of them.
It's a very long, dense article. (I think it was intended for
medical professionals.) Read it anyway. Yes, it's almost three
months old, but I sure don't get the impression that we've learned
much since that time. The big takeaway is that SARS-CoV-2 spreads
via aerosols; that is, naked virus particles or droplets so small
that they remain suspended in the air for a long time. (A lot of
supposed experts deny this.) Ever watch cigarette smoke? It doesn't
drift toward the ground. It gradually spreads out until you can't
see it anymore. But take a whiff of the supposedly empty air, and
you'll know it's still there.
Most droplets fall to the ground fairly quickly. But it's true
(as I mentioned yesterday) that in low-humidity environments,
droplets evaporate quickly, and what may have been exhaled as a
droplet large enough to fall can shrink to aerosol size before it
hits the ground. We're having a cool day here to close out June in
Arizona. It won't even break 100. The humidity is way up, at 16%.
Tomorrow July comes in like a toaster oven (by most people's
standards) at 103. The humidity will be 10% or less. Even a 100µm
droplet will likely give up its water long before it hits the
ground in that kind of humidity. After that, it floats for what may
be 30,000 hours; i.e., indefinitely.
People are still getting into fistfights about whether there are
enough viral particles in airborne aerosol droplets to cause
infection. It's not a yes/no kind of question. Like a lot of other
things associated with health, it's about probabilities. I'm
thinking that if you spend an hour in a crowded bar where everybody
is talking loud, laughing, and drinking, you're likely to get
enough virus to become infected, even if everybody in the bar
is wearing a mask. If you pass somebody in the baking aisle at
Safeway, probably not. Why do I say this? Two things:
- There is something called "time in proximity." The longer you
spend close to an infected person, the more likely you are to get
sufficient viral load to come down with COVID-19. I don't go to
bars much for the bar experience, but my writers' workshop took
place in a sports bar for over three years. When there were
important games, people were draped all over each other, talking
loud and cheering when their side made a good play.
- You can catch this thing if you get enough viruses in your
eyes. A couple of droplets is all it takes. Masks don't protect
your eyes. Nor do I think masks eliminate all exhaled aerosols. Sit
in a bar for an hour with hordes of people cheering into their
masks, well, you'll probably get enough of the bad guy in your eyes
to come down with it. Why? Badly fitted masks allow exhaled air to
flow out the edges. I tried singing with a mask on to see if they
leaked out the edges when I sang forcefully. They did.
I'm sure I'll get yelled at for my contention that masks don't
help us anywhere near as much as our supposed health experts claim,
but I'm past caring. Which leads us to another and probably more
controversial link, which is
one MD fisking a rah-rah hurray-for-masks post
by another MD. This is a guest post on Sarah Hoyt's blog, and
you're free to dial it down if that makes a difference to you. I
don't agree with all the points made, but there are some solid
numbers and good explanations about some of the downsides of
wearing masks, few of which ever come up in the current debate.
Something else that I knew but forgot to mention yesterday: A
real N95 mask filters inbound air only. N95's have one-way
exhalation ports that remain closed until pressure in the mask
indicates that the wearer has exhaled. Then it opens and releases
the wearer's breath through the port. No filtering of exhaled
breath is done. None. N95's exist specifically to keep
patients from infecting medical personnel. They protect no one but
the wearer. The tiresome bleat that "You wear a mask to reassure
and protect others" simply doesn't apply for N95 masks.
So where do I sit in all this? I'll give you a list:
- We do not know a lot of things, particularly involving
viral load, antibody generation, asymptomatic carriers, etc.
Everything we know about SARS-CoV-2 and its effects (COVID-19) must
be regarded as tentative. We'll learn more as we go, but right now
there is a lot of arguing and handwaving over significant
issues.
- Wearing a mask is no guarantee that you won't catch the
virus, nor infect others. Everything is a matter of
probabilities. The type of mask matters, some being worthless
(handkerchiefs & bandanas etc.) and some a lot better. But none
are any guarantee, especially if you wear a mask the wrong way.
(I've seen a lot of that in grocery stores.)
- Time in proximity matters. It's the crowded bar thing
again, or any dense meeting of bodies talking, laughing, or lor'
'elp us, cheering. Spend enough time cheek-by-jowl with virus
carriers, and you will almost certainly get the virus, mask or no
mask.
- Masks can be overwhelmed by strong exhalation. I've
tried this myself, as I said before: Cheering or singing into a
mask will just force air out the sides when the material of which
the mask is made can no longer pass the volume of air presented to
it. That air is not filtered.
- Masks don't protect your eyes. This should be
self-explanatory, but it's rarely discussed. Getting droplets in
your eyes is apparently less likely to lead to infection than
breathing them in. However, after enough time in dense gatherings,
your eyes could put your viral load over the top into infection
territory.
- And my conclusion: Put as much distance between yourself
and others as you can. Even that's no guarantee. Furthermore,
for some people it may be all but impossible. But for people in my
age bracket (I turned 68 yesterday) it could become a life-or-death
issue.
Carol and I wear masks, and we stay home a lot. We certainly
don't go to bars or political rallies or protests or anywhere else
you have screaming crowds. If you pin me down on it, I'll express
my opinion that masks don't protect you anywhere near as well as
ten feet of clear air. But as with almost everything else about the
virus, your guess is as good as mine.