As you may imagine, we have difficulty with some patients
wearing masks, because well, they are not in their best mind at the moment and
don’t always think well even when they mean well. Unsurprisingly, those are also the patients
we have the hardest time getting to remember handwashing and hand
sanitizer. I wondered if that is true of
the population in general, just more visible in a psychiatric population. Are the people who don’t wear masks also the
people who wash their hands less? The
latter is much more important. Some say
that mask-wearing was never that important, but I think even the most skeptical
are still pro-handwashing. On an individual basis, that would make intuitive
sense. The people who are really
cautious by nature were likely already more germ-conscious, but even if this is
a temporary phenomenon for others, the ones who mask are likely to be more
careful about washing and distancing.
The people who think it’s all a crock and there isn’t much danger and
don’t mask would be less likely to have increased their hand-washing and
hand-sanitiser above previous levels. Whether they were careful or not careful
before is unknown and I wouldn’t jump to conclusions about it. I do have to
suspect that on average this would be
a group that already washed its hands less, but whether that was generally true
or mostly the result of a terrible subgroup that brought the average down I wouldn’t
guess.
This would be an unsurprising result, but look what it
immediately leads to. If the
mask-avoiders are also avoiding enhanced washing, then the cautious will stay
away from them. They have provided an
unintentional signal to the rest of us. I don't pay much attention to this stuff. Or, I'm pretty sure I'm not in much danger and don't have it, so you probably aren't in any danger from me. Or, I wasn't really thinking about safety and illness and social norms when I left the house this morning, or I want others to know I am a brave person, not a timid one who can be told what to do by the government. I'm essentially a teenager masquerading as a libertarian. Or worst of all, I want to announce how ridiculous the rest of you are, and shove it in your faces. I have seen such comments at sites I know many of you go to, and I have talked to such people at work and on my walks. If that seems harsh, at least know that I am not making this up. Real people.
Next, does mask-wearing provide any reminder to wash more
often or be cautious not to crowd others?
Does it cue us overall to take things more seriously? I don’t know this to be true, but I have an
interesting parallel. When I fast and
pray, I don’t pray more often because of good intentions. I pray more often because I feel a pang of
hunger and go “Oh, right. I’m fasting in
order to pray more. Guess I’ll pray
now.” It would be an interesting set of
experiments to see whether wearing a mask ourselves or seeing other people
wearing masks, or both, or neither, caused us to wash our hands more often, or
remember to stand back a little farther.
Masks have limited primary value, though it can be cumulative if
everyone in an environment is wearing good ones properly. Whether they have secondary value is an
interesting question. That might provide
some explanation why some countries that have lots of masking have low infection
rates, even though each individual mask isn’t much help. It reminds everyone to wash and distance,
which are more important. If this is
true, I’d like to find a reminder that is less uncomfortable, thanks. I do
about 5 out of about 7.5 hours with a mask when I’m at work, and it sucks.
I want to stress this is a maybe. It’s plausible, but I don’t have anything to
back it up.
I was thinking, at the grocery store today to pick up fresh produce, that right now I'm probably safer going to the grocery store than I've ever been. Half the people are wearing masks, there's fewer of them, and the store is being constantly sanitized. Carts are sanitized, floors are mopped, shelves are being wiped, touch-screens at checkout sprayed and wiped clean many times an hour.
ReplyDeleteSeeing all this pandemic stuff maybe makes it feel very dangerous, but there's probably less chance of catching anything whatsoever at the store than ever before. Maybe that's why the re-opening has so far not produced big new illness waves in the South.
We are likely less vulnerable to many illnesses, yes. The sunlight doesn't hurt you in this case, either. A lot of the southern, especially south central and southwestern economies took off because of air conditioning. Now the sunny places will learn to have more going on outside again, to keep restaurants and some types of shopping open. We adapt, and adjust to the new normal pretty well.
ReplyDeleteFrom anecdotal observation in public restrooms over the years pre-C19, a lot of people aren't washing their hands.
ReplyDeleteI understand it is worse in other countries. Including nice places.
ReplyDelete"worse in other countries. Including nice places."
ReplyDeletehttps://cdn.statcdn.com/Infographic/images/normal/4111.jpeg
As mask-wearing has become politicized, it think it becomes an imperfect proxy for other hygiene, but still a useful one.
As a parallel, In my current workplace almost all use and interact with each other on social media outside of work, and for several I've been able to see from their posts that they've got an obsessive level of hate against certain subgroups within our culture. A former employee of mine that is now on facebook is full-on revolutionary marxist, 'liking' others posts about wishing to kill all landlords and supporting one's duty to 'steal as much from your employer as possible'.
So I think "free speech" is a wonderful thing, it allows me to see clearly who I want to keep as far away as possible in my voluntary interactions.