dsr-burnley
Well-known member
- Aug 15, 2014
- 2,634
Wearing a mask at the present time may have long term benefits, it may not. For me and my immediate family, it has significant short term disadvantages, so we don't.53%, 5.3% or 0.53% - I don't care. Wearing a mask reduces the risk of you passing on an infection to others to some degree.
As it happens at the end of last week I was walking around, infected with COVID, and didn't know. As ever when I went into shops I put my mask on. There's a chance by doing this I may have saved someone else from being infected. I may have saved someone highly vulnerable becoming infected, either directly from me, or from someone in between us.
If I didn't bother wearing a mask because "they don't work" or because "not many other people are" or "everyone else only wears them as chin warmers" or any other spurious reason I may cling to in order to try and justify my lack of empathy for others, then there would have been a higher chance of me passing it on.
I don't think there is much doubt that wearing a mask 365 days a year would reduce the spread of infections, before, during and after coronavirus. The question is, does the benefit outweigh the disadvantages. Historically, we have always believed it doesn't. Pre-vaccine, we believed it does. Now we have the vaccine, the majority have decided that the disadvantages of masks outwiegh the benefits; a strong minority like yourself, haven't. It's a matter of degree.
Which is why the 54% matters. Since masks were made optional in mid-July, we have had approx. 7 fortnights (which I understand approximate to the R-number cycle of infection) and R has remained roughly at 1. If it had been 53% less, ie. the infections had been reduced by 53% each cycle, then the number of cases would be 200 each day instead of 40,000. And if people actually believed that to be true, then they would have worn masks. This is the problem - if they try and persuade us to wear masks because of figures which are obviously wrong or else do not mean what they appear to mean, it isn't going to work.