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"Ms Gives wood made a very good point on the other thread Something Id often thought about too. If the new covid variant is so infectious, surely masks should be seen as bio hazards and not just lobbed on the floor Not sure yellow bins is the answer But what is?" I have a couple of dozen FFP3 masks which dont get washed or dumped as they are rotated for at least a week from coming off to going back on | |||
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"the fact people chuck any rubbish on the floor is just another example of the number of entitled selfish people that populate this country " Completely agreed. Disgusting. | |||
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"I work in care and all our PPE is yellow bagged since covid. It should at the very least make it to an actual bin!!!" I work in a supermarket and we're the same. | |||
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"Ms Gives wood made a very good point on the other thread Something Id often thought about too. If the new covid variant is so infectious, surely masks should be seen as bio hazards and not just lobbed on the floor Not sure yellow bins is the answer But what is?" A yellow bag to each household for them? These are currently given to households with people in that have clinical waste items like incontinence pads/pants etc. Quite how workable this would be for every household, I don't know, but it could be a possible solution. | |||
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"Ms Gives wood made a very good point on the other thread Something Id often thought about too. If the new covid variant is so infectious, surely masks should be seen as bio hazards and not just lobbed on the floor Not sure yellow bins is the answer But what is? A yellow bag to each household for them? These are currently given to households with people in that have clinical waste items like incontinence pads/pants etc. Quite how workable this would be for every household, I don't know, but it could be a possible solution. " is it a bio hazard home waste bin really necessary though? your bin bag gets tied, its put into the green bin, which gets emptied with the bin men only having to touch the handles of the bin not the waste inside and they only collect once a week max ... how would yellow bin bags and a separate collection improve on any of this | |||
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"Ms Gives wood made a very good point on the other thread Something Id often thought about too. If the new covid variant is so infectious, surely masks should be seen as bio hazards and not just lobbed on the floor Not sure yellow bins is the answer But what is? A yellow bag to each household for them? These are currently given to households with people in that have clinical waste items like incontinence pads/pants etc. Quite how workable this would be for every household, I don't know, but it could be a possible solution. is it a bio hazard home waste bin really necessary though? your bin bag gets tied, its put into the green bin, which gets emptied with the bin men only having to touch the handles of the bin not the waste inside and they only collect once a week max ... how would yellow bin bags and a separate collection improve on any of this " The masks would be safely incinerated with other hazardous waste rather than putting it in landfill. | |||
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"the fact people chuck any rubbish on the floor is just another example of the number of entitled selfish people that populate this country " | |||
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"Do people put their used tissues in clinical waste bins? " Good point | |||
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"Do people put their used tissues in clinical waste bins? " Unlikely as they probably don't have them, hence my post. If they did, they probably would be more inclined to do so. | |||
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"Do people put their used tissues in clinical waste bins? Unlikely as they probably don't have them, hence my post. If they did, they probably would be more inclined to do so. " People can't put their McDonald's bags in the bin less than a metre away. | |||
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"Ms Gives wood made a very good point on the other thread Something Id often thought about too. If the new covid variant is so infectious, surely masks should be seen as bio hazards and not just lobbed on the floor Not sure yellow bins is the answer But what is? A yellow bag to each household for them? These are currently given to households with people in that have clinical waste items like incontinence pads/pants etc. Quite how workable this would be for every household, I don't know, but it could be a possible solution. is it a bio hazard home waste bin really necessary though? your bin bag gets tied, its put into the green bin, which gets emptied with the bin men only having to touch the handles of the bin not the waste inside and they only collect once a week max ... how would yellow bin bags and a separate collection improve on any of this The masks would be safely incinerated with other hazardous waste rather than putting it in landfill. " but by the time the masks reach landfill the virus is not likely to be live anymore , so what are they contaminating? | |||
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"Do people put their used tissues in clinical waste bins? Unlikely as they probably don't have them, hence my post. If they did, they probably would be more inclined to do so. People can't put their McDonald's bags in the bin less than a metre away. " Then they have no respect for others or the environment have they? Do you have a solution to the OPs question about yellow bins by any chance? I'm sure we would all love to discuss it here amongst other possible solutions to the problem of incorrect use and disposal of masks, which is actually what this thread is about. | |||
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"Do people put their used tissues in clinical waste bins? Unlikely as they probably don't have them, hence my post. If they did, they probably would be more inclined to do so. People can't put their McDonald's bags in the bin less than a metre away. Then they have no respect for others or the environment have they? Do you have a solution to the OPs question about yellow bins by any chance? I'm sure we would all love to discuss it here amongst other possible solutions to the problem of incorrect use and disposal of masks, which is actually what this thread is about. " My point is that people don't dispose of their rubbish in 'normal' times so it's hardly surprising that they chuck masks on the floor. I'm sorry my post was too difficult for you to understand. | |||
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"Do people put their used tissues in clinical waste bins? Unlikely as they probably don't have them, hence my post. If they did, they probably would be more inclined to do so. People can't put their McDonald's bags in the bin less than a metre away. Then they have no respect for others or the environment have they? Do you have a solution to the OPs question about yellow bins by any chance? I'm sure we would all love to discuss it here amongst other possible solutions to the problem of incorrect use and disposal of masks, which is actually what this thread is about. My point is that people don't dispose of their rubbish in 'normal' times so it's hardly surprising that they chuck masks on the floor. I'm sorry my post was too difficult for you to understand. " It wasn't. | |||
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"I don't think clinical waste bags are needed. With the relatively short survival rate for the virus on surfaces I don't see it as a problem. If you were issued with a clinical waste bag, how often would you expect it to be collected? How many masks do you use a week? For me at the moment, I may use maybe 3 in a week. On that basis it would take me 12 months plus to fill a bag. If this is a biohazard, many people have no outside storage for the bag and would have it cluttering up the property. It is (or has become) normal household waste, and as mentioned above, tissues etc are placed in the normal household waste bin/bags " So are you re-using disposable masks or are you throwing away reusable ones? I did post correct usage from the government's website. | |||
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"Ms Gives wood made a very good point on the other thread Something Id often thought about too. If the new covid variant is so infectious, surely masks should be seen as bio hazards and not just lobbed on the floor Not sure yellow bins is the answer But what is? A yellow bag to each household for them? These are currently given to households with people in that have clinical waste items like incontinence pads/pants etc. Quite how workable this would be for every household, I don't know, but it could be a possible solution. is it a bio hazard home waste bin really necessary though? your bin bag gets tied, its put into the green bin, which gets emptied with the bin men only having to touch the handles of the bin not the waste inside and they only collect once a week max ... how would yellow bin bags and a separate collection improve on any of this The masks would be safely incinerated with other hazardous waste rather than putting it in landfill. " In the southeast all house hold waste goes to incineration at Newhaven | |||
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"Ms Gives wood made a very good point on the other thread Something Id often thought about too. If the new covid variant is so infectious, surely masks should be seen as bio hazards and not just lobbed on the floor Not sure yellow bins is the answer But what is? A yellow bag to each household for them? These are currently given to households with people in that have clinical waste items like incontinence pads/pants etc. Quite how workable this would be for every household, I don't know, but it could be a possible solution. is it a bio hazard home waste bin really necessary though? your bin bag gets tied, its put into the green bin, which gets emptied with the bin men only having to touch the handles of the bin not the waste inside and they only collect once a week max ... how would yellow bin bags and a separate collection improve on any of this The masks would be safely incinerated with other hazardous waste rather than putting it in landfill. In the southeast all house hold waste goes to incineration at Newhaven " | |||
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"I don't think clinical waste bags are needed. With the relatively short survival rate for the virus on surfaces I don't see it as a problem. If you were issued with a clinical waste bag, how often would you expect it to be collected? How many masks do you use a week? For me at the moment, I may use maybe 3 in a week. On that basis it would take me 12 months plus to fill a bag. If this is a biohazard, many people have no outside storage for the bag and would have it cluttering up the property. It is (or has become) normal household waste, and as mentioned above, tissues etc are placed in the normal household waste bin/bags So are you re-using disposable masks or are you throwing away reusable ones? I did post correct usage from the government's website. " The virus only lasts up to 3 days...so if Disposable or not they should be safe to wear aa long as you wash your hands when putting it on and off. | |||
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"The Royal Cornwall Trust hospitals are using a sterimelt to recycle their masks, the company makes bins and tool boxes with the plastic, the only waste is the elastic ears they have to cut off" . this is great to hear | |||
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"I would want to know how long viral particles remain infectious on surfaces: I'm pretty sure that's been downgraded significantly since the first studies. I use reusable masks and follow appropriate donning and doffing procedure. Littering is disgusting whatever it is." Depending on the surface, anywhere between a few to 72hrs. Removing a worn reusable mask by the ear elastic, carefully dropping into a plastic sealable bag and chucking the mask straight in the wash should be fine (with suitable hand washing). I have little plastic pouches for my cloth ones - you can dangle by the elastic, drop into the pouch and seal the end. The fluid repellent coating on proper disposable masks means viral particles shouldn't survive very long - the drier it is, the less hospitable it is for the virus. | |||
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"I see face masks everywhere on the floor even just in my local streets." Same where I live. Masks discarded outside supermarkets and in the street even though there are plenty of bins nearby. Don’t people have any respect for their environment these days? | |||
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"the fact people chuck any rubbish on the floor is just another example of the number of entitled selfish people that populate this country " | |||
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"the fact people chuck any rubbish on the floor is just another example of the number of entitled selfish people that populate this country " Especially as 'floor' has now come to mean any base surface whether inside a building or out! | |||
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"The disposables have been in our water ways, including the oceans, for some time. It makes me feel sick to see them discarded so thoughtlessly. " Apparently its a ticking global time bomb thats building up at an insanse pace given almost all the worlds population are using them for the last 10 months. Sadly its going to be (and already is places) utterly devasting to marine life | |||
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"I see face masks everywhere on the floor even just in my local streets. Same where I live. Masks discarded outside supermarkets and in the street even though there are plenty of bins nearby. Don’t people have any respect for their environment these days?" Left in trollies too! That's just wronger than wrong. | |||
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"I see face masks everywhere on the floor even just in my local streets. Same where I live. Masks discarded outside supermarkets and in the street even though there are plenty of bins nearby. Don’t people have any respect for their environment these days? Left in trollies too! That's just wronger than wrong." Yes it is! My mate works in car park doing trolleys the amount the poor bugger has to clear out of the trolleys is awful! X | |||
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"I would want to know how long viral particles remain infectious on surfaces: I'm pretty sure that's been downgraded significantly since the first studies. I use reusable masks and follow appropriate donning and doffing procedure. Littering is disgusting whatever it is. Depending on the surface, anywhere between a few to 72hrs. Removing a worn reusable mask by the ear elastic, carefully dropping into a plastic sealable bag and chucking the mask straight in the wash should be fine (with suitable hand washing). I have little plastic pouches for my cloth ones - you can dangle by the elastic, drop into the pouch and seal the end. The fluid repellent coating on proper disposable masks means viral particles shouldn't survive very long - the drier it is, the less hospitable it is for the virus. " I hoped you'd show up I have a clean zip lock and dirty zip lock, and wash or sanitise before touching anything | |||
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"I would want to know how long viral particles remain infectious on surfaces: I'm pretty sure that's been downgraded significantly since the first studies. I use reusable masks and follow appropriate donning and doffing procedure. Littering is disgusting whatever it is. Depending on the surface, anywhere between a few to 72hrs. Removing a worn reusable mask by the ear elastic, carefully dropping into a plastic sealable bag and chucking the mask straight in the wash should be fine (with suitable hand washing). I have little plastic pouches for my cloth ones - you can dangle by the elastic, drop into the pouch and seal the end. The fluid repellent coating on proper disposable masks means viral particles shouldn't survive very long - the drier it is, the less hospitable it is for the virus. I hoped you'd show up I have a clean zip lock and dirty zip lock, and wash or sanitise before touching anything" I'd expect nothing less than your ziplock bag arrangement | |||
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