kangarooflyer88
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It surprises me to this day that we are 2 years into this pandemic and people haven't figured out how to wear a mask. I've seen them under noses, I've seen them cover the noses but not the mouth, some are wearing in on their neck and chin like a bib they may wear if they're eating spaghetti from a TGIFridays. Then people are wearing cloth masks which are shown to not be anywhere near as effective as surgical masks or reusing their surgical masks, or wearing their surgical mask inside out because it was a meme on TikTok. At this point, I think it's fair to say that at this point when in public we shouldn't assume people will be masked properly. That's why I stick largely to N95 respirators since it's the only shield against that type of incompetence.And of course that graph doesnt take into account:
a. that many people choose to wear masks voluntarily even when not mandated
b. even when madated there is a significant portion of the population who dont wear them or wear them properly
and the fact that majority of tranmission is happening within households where people are generally unmasked.
Ironically, the only people who I see wearing their masks correctly are travellers. In particular, I was pleasantly surprised on my last trip to MEL to see a number of fellow passengers wearing P2 (N95) respirators including 3M Auras (called the Rolls Royce of N95 respirators). I would go so far as to say you're more likely to catch COVID at a grocery store than Sydney airport.
Unfortunately a lot of people are left out of the scheme. For instance, my institution doesn't require rapid antigen tests for me to go to the office. Now some will point to the rapid antigen vouchers that are being handed out, but that program is targeted at the elderly and vets, not immunocompromised people who need the peace of mind of getting a weekly rapid antigen test. The good news is I managed to source some tests on the cheap (around $8/test), but if I wasn't as financially secure I doubt I would be testing as often.Here’s one less thing to worry about…
Federal government to make COVID-19 PCR and rapid antigen tests tax deductible
Not sure if it will make anything deductible that wasn’t already but the fix to the FBT anomaly is a relief.
Cheers skip
-RooFlyer88