South Africans should rather donate their stockpiles of surgical masks to healthcare professionals, as wearing a mask is unlikely to prevent most from catching the feared Covid-19 virus anyway.
The country went into panic-buying mode in recent weeks with scores flocking to malls and pharmacies to panic buy masks, gloves and sanitisers in an attempt to contain the spread of the fatal virus. The country’s citizens are now walking around with masks while small enterprises try sell all sorts of masks, gloves and sanitisers to desperate buyers on social media.
According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), however, you only need to wear a mask if you are taking care of someone suspected of contracting the Covid-19 virus, and masks should be worn by those who are already infected by the Covid-19 virus or are coughing and sneezing.
N95 respirator masks are the best option as they prevent the inhalation of airborne viruses, chairperson of the South African Medical Association Dr Angelique Coetzee said.
“With the mask, you can still catch the virus as it can still go through the eyes. It only helps you not to spread the virus to other people if you are already infected. It is totally pointless wearing a mask. People are now wasting the masks since we have a shortage of masks for healthcare professionals, and people don’t really need them,” she said.
Gloves did not prevent the spreading of the virus either, but instead only protected the person wearing them. One should rather continuously change the gloves used to prevent further contamination of other surfaces.
“Gloves only protect yourself and not the other person. But with contaminated gloves, you can spread it to other people or even touch your face and get infected because the virus stays on surfaces for about nine hours.”
Coetzee said shoppers should have rather stockpiled on any soap of their choice rather than hand sanitiser, as it was best to wash off bacteria and viruses than rubbing hands together.
“People should rather stock up on any soap. It doesn’t need to be a special soap. It is much cheaper than hand sanitiser. Hand sanitiser works if it is between 70% and 75% alcohol. Otherwise keep a bottle of water and piece of soap, wet your hands with water, use the soap for about 20 seconds on your skin and rinse off.”
According to the World Health Organisation:
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