ManOfSussex
We wunt be druv
Depressing statistic I read in The Times earlier. In The Republic of Ireland on Saturday they tested 8000 people compared to 18000 here, when we have a population 10x greater than them.
All I am saying is that for now even those in a difficult personal employment position appear to support the current rules. None of us can know anyway but I remain impressed that support for difficult decisions remains firm.
It's coming down in Spain and Italy, even with more testing. This thing is a bugger but the infections will come down if they aren't already.
Are there any stats on the average number of items of PPE that healthcare workers require each day? I'm assuming that it is many more than one of each. Also, can any of these be washed and re-used? When you hear about millions of items being delivered what period of time would that cover?
Are there any stats on the average number of items of PPE that healthcare workers require each day? I'm assuming that it is many more than one of each. Also, can any of these be washed and re-used? When you hear about millions of items being delivered what period of time would that cover?
I wondered this about the face shields being 3D printed for the NHS around the country. Surely they can be cleaned and sterilised (maybe strong UV) or are they thrown away?
I have not seen anything hence my asking and nothing I’ve seen indicates anything of the sort
I understand the face masks used in ITU, ie the full mask covering the face (looks a bit like a welders masks) can't be cleaned and sterilised and are of single use. In terms of gowns, unit with about 8 patients is using at least 50 a day (also single use).
I understand the face masks used in ITU, ie the full mask covering the face (looks a bit like a welders masks) can't be cleaned and sterilised and are of single use. In terms of gowns, unit with about 8 patients is using at least 50 a day (also single use).
There may be a misunderstanding here.
Masks designed for use by hospital staff working with patients vulnerable to bacterial infection (masks to protect the patient in other words) may be 'deemed' single use because under ordinary circumstances it may not be cost-effective to do the cleaning. Some bacteria are tough little buggers too.
The same masks, however, could be great for protecting hospital staff from sneezing COVA patients, and easily washed (COVA is a fragile virus that disintegrates in soapy water - hence all the hand washing advice) for this purpose.
It is quite possible that wires have been crossed and different issues have been conflated with unfortunate consequences. I absolutely hate conflation and consider it a blight.
The visor-type masks staff are wearing are single use - they're apparently pretty useless after one shift anyway as become difficult to see through, and then the strength of the cleaning fluid they have to use would ruin them anyway.
Yep - cleaning fluid degrades the visor material too quickly, so they get binned after one use.
Providing the social distancing and only essential work conditions continue schools remain closed. When these restriction are lifted it could sky rocket again!!
Fair enough. I stand correct. Just a thought.
use a suitable polymer and cleaning agent that doesnt degrade then. im certain they could be cleaned but there is no established safe protocol to do so (effort to collect, contaimination risks, cleaning process, check they were done properly...), so bin them.
There may be a misunderstanding here.
Masks designed for use by hospital staff working with patients vulnerable to bacterial infection (masks to protect the patient in other words) may be 'deemed' single use because under ordinary circumstances it may not be cost-effective to do the cleaning. Some bacteria are tough little buggers too.
The same masks, however, could be great for protecting hospital staff from sneezing COVA patients, and easily washed (COVA is a fragile virus that disintegrates in soapy water - hence all the hand washing advice) for this purpose.
It is quite possible that wires have been crossed and different issues have been conflated with unfortunate consequences. I absolutely hate conflation and consider it a blight.
The masks being used in the ITU dept where my wife works are single use. They are the ones that look like a welders mask and you may have seen them on news reports. Patients probably aren't wearing them because, when they can, they are lying face down.
Seems strange that we are told that washing our hands with soap for 20 min inactivates the virus, but we can't clean the full-face masks. I understand if acetate-based would be clouded by solvents but I would have thought that cleaning and sterilisation should be possible