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Are You Having The Booster ?

i don’t think this is actually true.
According to what I've read the covid-19 virus is smaller than the hole's in all "face coverings " . You need a high grade mask ( forget the number) to stop it passing through and I've never seen anyone wearing one of those outside a job/ industry requirement.
It will of course stop any virus which is attached to spittle [emoji16]
 
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According to what I've read the covid-19 virus is smaller than the hole's in all "face coverings " . You need a high grade mask ( forget the number) to stop it passing through and I've never seen anyone wearing one of those outside a job/ industry requirement.
N95 the one that cups the mouth and nose removes 95% hence the name.
That goes down to 3 microns.
The virus is 1-2 microns in size
 
N95 the one that cups the mouth and nose removes 95% hence the name.
That goes down to 3 microns.
The virus is 1-2 microns in size
That one doesn't keep it out 100% either then.
We'll all have to wear respirators soon [emoji23]
 
After all, if you think of it logically. When I was in the army, in a chemical environment you had to wear a respirator not a cotton face covering [emoji38]
 
That one doesn't keep it out 100% either then.
We'll all have to wear respirators soon [emoji23]
They stop the person wearing them spraying saliva everywhere that's about it for protection
That is why medical staff wear mask and visor.
Even that won't guarantee keeping it out.
Only NBC suits will lol
 
According to what I've read the covid-19 virus is smaller than the hole's in all "face coverings " . You need a high grade mask ( forget the number) to stop it passing through and I've never seen anyone wearing one of those outside a job/ industry requirement.
It will of course stop any virus which is attached to spittle [emoji16]

but if that’s the case it would be the same in both directions, no? the virus doesn’t cut about in the atmosphere by itself. it’s in droplets of body excretions.
 
17/11/21
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...ost-effective-way-to-tackle-covid-study-finds
upload_2021-11-18_22-24-5.png
 
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